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euphoria
[ yoo-fawr-ee-uh ]
noun
- a state of intense happiness and self-confidence:
She was flooded with euphoria as she went to the podium to receive her Student Research Award.
- Psychology. a feeling of happiness, confidence, or well-being sometimes exaggerated in pathological states as mania.
euphoria
/ juːˈfɒrɪk; juːˈfɔːrɪə /
noun
- a feeling of great elation, esp when exaggerated
Derived Forms
- euphoric, adjective
Other Words From
- eu·phor·ic [yoo-, fawr, -ik, -, for, -], adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of euphoria1
Example Sentences
“She was tireless and often seemed in a state of euphoria,” Pausini told police, according to the documents.
But her euphoria evaporates when she realizes he is simply trying to pretend she is a man.
“I feel absolutely clean inside, and there is nothing but pure euphoria,” wrote Shulgin in his journals.
Then, the post-euphoria realization: “I need to get to the gym.”
In the years since, it has become harder to maintain the euphoria of those early months of the Arab uprisings.
Everyone roughly within a radius of fifty feet—I've checked the limit a thousand times—immediately feels a sort of euphoria.
I felt the great fear-loneliness in the other Marl begin to recede and in its place came an almost overpowering euphoria.
There is no metaphysical hair-splitting in An Enemy of the People, nor sentimental talk about euphoria and going happily to death.
It was against the law for dozy-pills to produce a sensation of euphoria, of well-being.
Her hesitant voice was music, rousing in Farrell a warm and expectant euphoria that glowed like old wine in his veins.
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