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euphoric
[yoo-fawr-ik, -for-]
adjective
feeling or generating intense happiness, confidence, and a sense of well-being.
I’ve experienced both crushing defeat and euphoric victory.
She was euphoric when she received the Oscar.
Psychiatry.relating to or experiencing a pathologically exaggerated feeling of happiness, confidence, or energy.
During a manic phase, people with bipolar disorder are usually euphoric and believe they can accomplish anything.
Other Word Forms
- euphorically adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of euphoric1
Example Sentences
Tottenham's euphoric players stepped off the plane the day after the night before and ventured straight into central London.
While its euphoric side effects have long been known, the rise of vaping has helped create a perfect delivery vehicle for the gas - and a perfect recipe for an addiction, experts warn.
"She's so much fun. Her music is so soulful, so euphoric and she is just a great time and I think her set's going to be a great time."
In that euphoric moment, the King's mother, the late Queen Elizabeth II, then 19, had also secretly gone out among the crowds and had been part of a conga at the Ritz hotel.
“When you get binding at that receptor, you get a lot of those euphoric properties,” Marusak told Salon in a phone interview.
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