You are on page 1of 1

(exult).

Then I
rejoiced and exulted, and was so arrayed in assurance of the time to come
that I seemed to possess and taste it.
� (exalt). The poet is impressed, moved, thrilled
and exalted, and pours out his song from his feelings and transfused with
emotion.
(wallow).
Carolyn Reiff, who has long been a muse of courage in my life teaching me to
work instead of wallow.

(jubilate). Leaving the now free


and happy town to jubilate in its deliverance from the enemy, Joan of Arc
went by Blois and Tours to Chinon.
� (jubilation). He was received in London
with jubilation, and was richly pensioned for his heroic adventures.

(jubilant). The mood amongst my friends suddenly


turned jubilant, and one of them rushed into the hotel.

(gleeful). We glided over


the water, on the flat, amid the joyful acclamations and gleeful laughter of
my fair companions.
� (elated). He was
highly elated, and pronounced everything a perfect success.

(triumph). Behind his triumph was a hint of the vast resources and the
slowmoving but unassailable force his uniform represented.
� (exuberate). His protest,
though exuberated, against leniency in dealing with atrocities, emphatically
requisite in an age apt to ignore the rigour of justice, has been so far salutary,
and may be more so.

You might also like