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单词 happiness
释义

happiness


hap·py

H0054800 (hăp′ē)adj. hap·pi·er, hap·pi·est 1. Enjoying, showing, or marked by pleasure, satisfaction, or joy. See Synonyms at glad.2. Cheerful; willing: happy to help.3. Characterized by good luck. See Synonyms at fortunate.4. Being especially well-adapted; felicitous: a happy turn of phrase.5. a. Characterized by a spontaneous or obsessive inclination to use something. Often used in combination: trigger-happy.b. Enthusiastic about or involved with to a disproportionate degree. Often used in combination: money-happy; clothes-happy.
[Middle English, from hap, luck; see hap.]
hap′pi·ly adv.hap′pi·ness n.

hap•pi•ness

(ˈhæp i nɪs)

n. 1. the quality or state of being happy. 2. good fortune; pleasure; contentment; joy. [1520–30]
hapless, happiness - Hapless means one is lacking hap, "good fortune, luck"; the words happy and happiness also have the root "hap."See also related terms for luck.

Happiness

See also attitudes; moods
ataraxiaa state of tranquility free from anxiety and emotional disturbance. — ataractic, ataraxic, adj.athedoniaan inability to be happy. — athedonic, adj.cheromaniaan extreme love for gaiety.cherophobiaan abnormal fear of gaiety.eudemonics, eudaemonics1. an art or means of acquiring happiness; eudemonism.
2. the theory of happiness. — eudemonia, n.eudemonic, eudemonical, adj.
eudemonism, eudaemonismEthics. a moral system based upon the performance of right actions to achieve happiness. — eudemonist, eudaemonist, n.euphoria, euphory1. a state of happiness and well-being.
2. Psychiatry. an exaggerated state of happiness, with no foundation in truth or reality. — euphoric, adj.
jocunditythe quality or condition of being merry or cheerful. — jocund, adj.jovialistObsolete, a person who leads a merry life.joviality1. the quality or state of being merry or jovial.
2. festivity.
jucundityObsolete. the condition or act of being pleasant.macarismthe practice of making others happy through praise and felicitation. — macarize, v.

Happiness

 

See Also: CONTENTMENT, JOY, PLEASURE

  1. All happiness is a chance encounter and at every moment presents itself to you like a beggar by the roadside —André Gide
  2. The best advice on the art of being happy is about as easy to follow as advice to be well when one is sick —Madame Swetchine

    See Also: DIFFICULTY

  3. Dry happiness is like dry bread. We eat, but we do not dine —Victor Hugo

    In Les Miserables, the hero, Jean Valjean, continues: “I wish for the superfluous, for the useless, for the extravagant, for the too much, for that which is not good for anything.”

  4. Ecstatic as a scientist who had just discovered the key to immortality —Susan Fromberg Schaeffer
  5. Elated as though he had stumbled on a treasure —Brian Moore
  6. A gay, light happiness, like bubbles in wine held up against the sun —Ben Ames Williams
  7. Glowed with happiness, like a child with expectations of a birthday party —Frank Swinnerton
  8. The happiest women, like the happiest nations, have no history —George Eliot
  9. Happiness as wholesome as honey on the comb —John Braine
  10. Happiness choked my throat like an anthem. It flowed through me like a river from the beginning of the column to its end —Aharon Megged
  11. (In the midst of happiness grows a seed of unhappiness.) Happiness consumes itself like a flame. (It cannot burn forever) —August Strindberg
  12. Happiness … descended upon her heart, like a cloud of morning dew in a dell of wild-flowers —Walter De La Mare
  13. Happiness … filled her brain like wine —William Dean Howells
  14. Happiness flits from branch to twig to branch like a hummingbird —Delmore Schwartz
  15. Happiness is falling on us out of the sky … like a blanket of snow —Jean Giraudoux
  16. Happiness is like a sunbeam, which the least shadow intercepts —Chinese proverb
  17. Happiness is like manna; it is to be gathered in grains, and enjoyed every day. It will not keep; it cannot be accumulated —Tryon Edwards
  18. Happiness is like time and space; we make and measure it ourselves —George Du Maurier
  19. Happiness, like air, is not something you can put in a bottle —Anon

    See Also: AIR

  20. Happiness, like the pink and white anemones of my childhood, is a flower that must not be picked —Andre Maurois
  21. The happiness of the wicked passes away like a torrent —Jean Baptiste Racine
  22. Happiness struck her like a shower of rain —Eudora Welty
  23. Happiness … was there like light seen through moving leaves, like touching a warm stone —Sumner Locke Elliott
  24. Happy and thoughtless as an apple on a tree —George Garrett
  25. Happy as a butterfly in a garden full of sunshine and flowers —Louisa May Alcott
  26. Happy as a clam —American colloquialism, attributed to New England

    A variation of this found in Bartlett’s Dictionary of Americanisms is, “Happy as a clam at high water.”

  27. Happy as a couple of linebackers after winning a high school game —Marge Piercy
  28. Happy as a couple of cherrystone clams —George Garrett
  29. Happy as a dog with a bone —Anon
  30. Happy as a lover —William Wordsworth
  31. (I am )happy as a mother whose good baby sleeps —May Sarton
  32. Happy as a pig in clover —American colloquialism

    In the American army this gave way to “Being happy as a pig in shit.”

  33. Happy as a robin when he trills —Anon American song “Love Letters”
  34. Happy as a swallow —Richard Ford
  35. Happy as a tick in a dog’s ear —Jay Parini
  36. Happy as trees that find a wind to sway them —Sara Teasdale
  37. He loved happiness like I love tea —Eudora Welty
  38. When it [happiness] comes to one, it comes as naturally as sleep —Willa Cather
  39. I was high as taxes —Loren D. Estleman
  40. I was like a river in flood … drowning in my own happiness, and buoyed up by it at the same time —Eugene Ionesco
  41. Live together … as happily as two lobsters in a saucepan, two bugs on a muscle —Dylan Thomas

    See Also: RELATIONSHIPS

  42. Looked like the sun at the zenith —Carlos Baker
  43. Happy-looking as if he’s just heard the foreman say, “Not guilty” —William Slavens McNutt
  44. Looking for happiness is like clutching the shadow or chasing the wind —Japanese proverb

    See Also: ELUSIVENESS

  45. Looks like he is a kid holding his first puppy —John Wainwright
  46. Moments of happiness hang like pearls on the finest silken thread, certain to be snapped, the pearls scattered away —Joan Chase
  47. On the brink of our happiness we stop like someone on a drunk starting to weep —Galway Kinnell
  48. The rays of happiness, like those of light, are colorless when unbroken —Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
  49. There is nothing which has yet been contrived by man, by which so much happiness is produced as by a good tavern or inn —Samuel Johnson, March 21, 1776
  50. The vicissitudes of life touch him [a happy man] lightly, like the wind in the aspen-tree —Anton Chekhov
  51. Wore his new happiness like an advertisement —Nancy Huddleston Packer
Thesaurus
Noun1.happiness - state of well-being characterized by emotions ranging from contentment to intense joyhappiness - state of well-being characterized by emotions ranging from contentment to intense joyfelicityemotional state, spirit - the state of a person's emotions (especially with regard to pleasure or dejection); "his emotional state depended on her opinion"; "he was in good spirits"; "his spirit rose"beatification, beatitude, blessedness - a state of supreme happinessradiance - an attractive combination of good health and happiness; "the radiance of her countenance"unhappiness - state characterized by emotions ranging from mild discontentment to deep grief
2.happiness - emotions experienced when in a state of well-beingfeeling - the experiencing of affective and emotional states; "she had a feeling of euphoria"; "he had terrible feelings of guilt"; "I disliked him and the feeling was mutual"bonheur - (French) happiness and good humorgladfulness, gladness, gladsomeness - experiencing joy and pleasuregaiety, merriment - a gay feelingrejoicing - a feeling of great happinessbelonging - happiness felt in a secure relationship; "with his classmates he felt a sense of belonging"blitheness, cheerfulness - a feeling of spontaneous good spirits; "his cheerfulness made everyone feel better"contentment - happiness with one's situation in lifesadness, unhappiness - emotions experienced when not in a state of well-being

happiness

noun pleasure, delight, joy, cheer, satisfaction, prosperity, ecstasy, enjoyment, bliss, felicity, exuberance, contentment, wellbeing, high spirits, elation, gaiety, jubilation, merriment, cheerfulness, gladness, beatitude, cheeriness, blessedness, light-heartedness I think she was looking for happiness.
depression, distress, grief, misery, sadness, sorrow, misfortune, unhappiness, annoyance, despondency, low spiritsQuotations
"Happiness depends upon ourselves" [Aristotle Nicomachean Ethics]
"Happiness to me is wine,"
"Effervescent, superfine."
"Full of tang and fiery pleasure,"
"Far too hot to leave me leisure"
"For a single thought beyond it" [Amy Lowell Sword Blades and Poppy Seeds]
"Happiness is a matter of one's most ordinary everyday mode of consciousness being busy and lively and unconcerned with self" [Iris Murdoch The Nice and the Good]
"To be happy, we must not be too concerned with others" [Albert Camus The Fall]
"I am happy and content because I think I am" [Alain René Lesage Histoire de Gil Blas de Santillane]
"Ask yourself whether you are happy, and you cease to be so" [John Stuart Mill Autobiography]
"Happiness does not lie in happiness, but in the achievement of it" [Fyodor Dostoevsky A Diary of a Writer]
"In theory there is a possibility of perfect happiness: To believe in the indestructible element within one, and not to strive towards it" [Franz Kafka The Collected Aphorisms]
"Happiness is not an ideal of reason but of imagination" [Immanuel Kant Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysics of Ethics]
"Happiness is in the taste, and not in the things" [La Rochefoucauld Maxims]
"Shall I give you my recipe for happiness? I find everything useful and nothing indispensable. I find everything wonderful and nothing miraculous. I reverence the body. I avoid first causes like the plague" [Norman Douglas South Wind]
"Happiness lies in the fulfilment of the spirit through the body" [Cyril Connolly The Unquiet Grave]
"We have no more right to consume happiness without producing it than to consume wealth without producing it" [George Bernard Shaw Candida]
"What we call happiness in the strictest sense comes from the (preferably sudden) satisfaction of needs which have been dammed up to a high degree" [Sigmund Freud Civilization and its Discontents]
"Happiness is an imaginary condition, formerly often attributed by the living to the dead, now usually attributed by adults to children, and by children to adults" [Thomas Szasz The Second Sin]
"Nothing ages like happiness" [Oscar Wilde An Ideal Husband]
"Happiness is no laughing matter" [Richard Whately Apophthegms]
"Happiness is enjoyed only in proportion as it is known; and such is the state or folly of man, that it is known only by experience of its contrary" [Samuel Johnson The Adventurer]
"happiness: an agreeable sensation arising from contemplating the misery of another" [Ambrose Bierce The Devil's Dictionary]
"Happiness makes up in height for what it lacks in length" [Robert Frost The Witness Tree]

happiness

nounA condition of supreme well-being and good spirits:beatitude, blessedness, bliss, cheer, cheerfulness, felicity, gladness, joy, joyfulness.
Translations
幸福快乐

happy

(ˈhӕpi) adjective1. having or showing a feeling of pleasure or contentment. a happy smile; I feel happy today. 高興的 高兴的2. willing. I'd be happy to help you. 樂意的 乐意的3. lucky. By a happy chance I have the key with me. 幸運的 幸运的ˈhappiness noun 幸福 幸福ˈhappily adverbThe child smiled happily; Happily, (= Fortunately,) she arrived home safely. 高興地 幸福地ˌhappy-go-ˈlucky adjective not worrying about what might happen. cheerful and happy-go-lucky. 逍遙自在的,無憂無慮的 逍遥自在地happy medium a sensible middle course between two extreme positions. I need to find the happy medium between starving and over-eating. 中庸之道,折中辦法 中庸之道,折衷办法

happiness

快乐zhCN

happiness


money can't buy happiness

Wealth and material goods will not bring long-term happiness. The high rate of depression among lottery winners proves that money can't buy happiness.See also: buy, happiness, money

be the picture of (something)

The ideal example of something (which is listed after "of"). Yes, Jill was in the hospital a few months ago, but she's the picture of health now. We went running together just the other day.See also: of, picture

feel a glow of happiness

To feel delighted and content. The newlyweds are so cute—they really seem to be feeling a glow of happiness.See also: feel, glow, happiness, of

feel a glow of happiness

 and feel a glow of contentment; feel a glow of satisfaction; feel a glow of peacefulnessFig. to have a good feeling of some kind. Anne felt a glow of happiness as she held her new baby. Sitting by the lake, the lovers felt a warm glow of contentment.See also: feel, glow, happiness, of

be the ˌpicture of ˈhealth, ˈhappiness, etc.

be completely or extremely healthy, etc: She’s the picture of happiness in this photo.He’s the picture of misery, isn’t he? Look at him standing there in the rain.See also: of, picture

Happiness


Happiness

 

the human spirit’s consciousness of that state of being which corresponds to the greatest inner satisfaction with the conditions of one’s existence, to a full and meaningful life, and to the realization of one’s life purpose. Happiness is the emotionally sensed form of the ideal. The concept of happiness does not simply refer to a specific objective or subjective human condition, but it expresses an idea of what human life should be like and of what exactly constitutes human bliss. Thus happiness is a normative and value-bound concept. What is deemed to constitute happiness depends on how the purpose and meaning of human life are defined.

The concept of happiness has a historical and class basis. In the history of moral consciousness, happiness has been considered an innate human right; but in practice, in a society of class antagonisms, as F. Engels pointed out, the oppressed classes’ striving toward happiness has always been ruthlessly and “lawfully” sacrificed to the ruling classes’ identical striving.

In criticizing the bourgeois-individualistic interpretation of happiness, the founders of Marxism-Leninism pointed out that man’s striving exclusively toward a personal happiness, divorced from social aims, degenerates into egoism, which tramples upon the interests of others and morally cripples the human personality. As Marx wrote, “If one wishes to be an animal, one may, of course, turn one’s back on the sufferings of humanity and worry about one’s own skin” (K. Marx and F. Engels, Soch., 2nd ed., vol. 31, p. 454). Marx likewise rejected the leveling concepts of “barracks communism”—concepts which he described as “a return to the unnatural simplicity of man when he is poor and has no wants” (K. Marx and F. Engels, Iz rannikh proizvedenii, 1956, p. 587).

In characterizing his own personal understanding of happiness, Marx stated he saw happiness in struggle (K. Marx and F. Engels, Soch., 2nd ed., vol. 31, p. 492). This concept, which is contrary to any philistine notion of happiness, does not represent some idyllic state of satisfaction with an existing situation; rather, it is the constant striving for a better future and the overcoming of obstacles on the way thereto; it is not the attainment of one’s own well-being but the full development and use of one’s abilities in conscious activity subordinate to the attainment of common goals. It is through conscientious service to people and through a revolutionary struggle to transform society, to realize the ideals of communism, and to achieve a better future for all humanity that man imbues his life with that higher meaning and is granted that profound satisfaction which he perceives as happiness.

Happiness

(dreams)If you are currently experiencing sadness this dream may be an attempt to compensate and to comfort you. Traditionally this may be called a dream of the contrary. Extreme happiness in a dream calls for an evaluation of daily reality in an attempt to identify those things that are difficult and painful, (i. e., things that make you feel the opposite of happy). Dreaming of happy children is said to be a good omen probably because children represent endless possibilities and opportunities for growth and development.

happiness


  • noun

Synonyms for happiness

noun pleasure

Synonyms

  • pleasure
  • delight
  • joy
  • cheer
  • satisfaction
  • prosperity
  • ecstasy
  • enjoyment
  • bliss
  • felicity
  • exuberance
  • contentment
  • wellbeing
  • high spirits
  • elation
  • gaiety
  • jubilation
  • merriment
  • cheerfulness
  • gladness
  • beatitude
  • cheeriness
  • blessedness
  • light-heartedness

Antonyms

  • depression
  • distress
  • grief
  • misery
  • sadness
  • sorrow
  • misfortune
  • unhappiness
  • annoyance
  • despondency
  • low spirits

Synonyms for happiness

noun a condition of supreme well-being and good spirits

Synonyms

  • beatitude
  • blessedness
  • bliss
  • cheer
  • cheerfulness
  • felicity
  • gladness
  • joy
  • joyfulness

Synonyms for happiness

noun state of well-being characterized by emotions ranging from contentment to intense joy

Synonyms

  • felicity

Related Words

  • emotional state
  • spirit
  • beatification
  • beatitude
  • blessedness
  • radiance

Antonyms

  • unhappiness

noun emotions experienced when in a state of well-being

Related Words

  • feeling
  • bonheur
  • gladfulness
  • gladness
  • gladsomeness
  • gaiety
  • merriment
  • rejoicing
  • belonging
  • blitheness
  • cheerfulness
  • contentment

Antonyms

  • sadness
  • unhappiness
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更新时间:2024/12/24 0:38:41