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View synonyms for elation

elation

[ ih-ley-shuhn ]

noun

  1. a feeling or state of great joy or pride; exultant gladness; high spirits.


elation

/ ɪˈleɪʃən /

noun

  1. joyfulness or exaltation of spirit, as from success, pleasure, or relief; high spirits
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


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Other Words From

  • self-e·lation noun
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Word History and Origins

Origin of elation1

First recorded in 1350–1400; Middle English elacioun, from Anglo-French, from Latin ēlātiōn-, stem of ēlātiō “ceremonial carrying out, elevation, ecstasy”; equivalent to elate + -ion
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Example Sentences

Newspaper articles in the digital archive of the Influenza Encyclopedia, produced by the Center for the History of Medicine at the University of Michigan, reported elation about the reopening of theaters.

From Time

I’m not talking about the elation of watching a child hook and fight their first fish only for the moment to end in tears after the fish gets away.

As I reread them, I remembered the elation, the fear, the disbelief, the hope that had accompanied each letter.

Back then, his walk was interrupted by “some strange feeling of elation,” as he told the Associated Press yesterday, about the moment he had his first glimmers of insight into the equations that would eventually make him famous.

From Time

My discomfort gave way to elation as I was briefly transported back to those vanished years of racing on forest trails in early September.

Elation turned to puzzlement as six infected nuns who received infusions all died.

But that sense of elation would last only a few short hours.

The elation is absurd, and therefore all the more endearing.

It is like a habit-forming drug that, in victory, saps your elation and, in defeat, deepens your despair.

Receiving a coffee-related gift triggers a Pavlovian response – elation, anticipation, a faux caffeine rush.

As he followed him on uptown, down his side-street, Lamb had a curious sense of elation.

Perhaps, as men get older, the effervescent elation of youth leaves them; but they are none the less happy.

There was no elation, but on the contrary he seemed weighed down with a sense of the responsibility resting on him.

She obeyed and he left them, the feeling of victory and elation coming to him in full then.

But there was no feeling of victory, none of the elation he had thought he would have.

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elateriumelative