júbilo
elation ; jubilation ; glee ; joy ; jouissance ; gaiety ; merriment ; mirth ; jollity ; jolliness.
She put her empty cup in the dirty-dish cart, and mounted on the wings of a pure and ingenuous elation the long flight of stairs leading to the offices on the first floor.
The letter sent Tomas Hernandez into a frenzy of conflicting reactions: ecstatic jubilation and ego-tripping, wild speculation and outrageous fantasy, compounded by confusion and indirection.
But we see the pain in a person's face, hear the glee in his chortles, perceive the affection in the looks and gestures of lovers.
In an authority list, the terms, whether descriptors or non-descriptors, may be single words (e.g., Hosiery, Journalism, Lingerie), or phrases of two or three words (e.g., Electric meters, Electric power plants, joy and sorrow).
The enjoyment of castigating Jade, of anticipating the derision and humilation she will face involves, undoubtedly, a classist jouissance.
There was a hype of gaiety and merriment in the air over the festive season.
There was a hype of gaiety and merriment in the air over the festive season.
The director continued speaking amid the embers of their mirth.
The more obvious effect is the public display of jollity that, when surrounded by others in the same spirit, brings an amazing energy and excitement to the air.
They say jolliness skips a generation.
con júbilo
joyously
gleefully
Wine lovers around the world have joyously adopted the British slang word 'plonk' to describe poor, cheap wine.
Nietzsche famously violates the rules of logic, gleefully engaging in the 'informal' fallacies, for example, in his appeals to emotions.