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The word armrest is correct and usable in written English.
You can use the word armrest to refer to a support for the arm usually found attached to the side of a chair or sofa. For example: The armrest of the sofa was comfortable and gave me something to lean on as I watched television.
Dictionary
armrest
noun
A part of a seat (of a chair) designed to support the arm.
Exact(60)
Expliseat's titanium seat also remains upright.Elbows at warAnother annoyance is the battle over a shared armrest.
The electric meter on your armrest will show you how much you owe for the power that you use.
Consider this, poor reader, when next you are wedged into a middle seat between squalling child and armrest hog, or ruing a battery just gone dead in the fourth hour of a thrice-extended delay.
Since the Japanese invariably cover their floors with rice-straw mats and sit on them instead of on chairs, tables are low and are also used as an armrest.
The Belgian patricians and their wives that he painted during his early years generally are rendered in bust- or knee-length; their hands hold gloves or other articles or fall idly over the back or armrest of a chair.
Inside the waiting room, where the air conditioning had stopped working, JJ slumped into a chair and laid her head on the armrest, suddenly despondent.
A hefty central armrest and storage box separates the rear seats.
When you think you're too cool to join in on the silent disco pic.twitter.com/1jmImsGw9s No translator headphones at chinese PM speech AND won armrest war with Corbyn.
I left the cigar smouldering in the armrest ashtray, straightened my tie and – minding my head on the low ceiling – stood up to visit the flight deck.
Im Dong-hyun of South Korea performed with such jaw-dropping accuracy in breaking the world record during the ranking competition no one was allowed to watch, it would have been possible to use the target as an armrest and be entirely safe.
— On landing, if you haven't finished sucking your complimentary throat lozenge, please stick it on the armrest for the next passenger.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com