euphoria
noun /juːˈfɔːriə/
  /juːˈfɔːriə/
[uncountable]- an extremely strong feeling of happiness and excitement that usually lasts only a short time
- I was in a state of euphoria all day.
 - Euphoria soon gave way to despair.
 - The government’s current euphoria over the exchange rate is unlikely to last.
 
Extra Examples- The news sparked a wave of euphoria across the country.
 - These substances produce euphoria when taken in small doses.
 - the euphoria of victory
 - the euphoria we all felt when they were finally defeated
 
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- early
 - initial
 - general
 - …
 
- wave
 
- feel
 - induce
 - produce
 - …
 
- evaporate
 - fade
 
- euphoria about
 - euphoria of
 - euphoria over
 - …
 
- a feeling of euphoria
 - a state of euphoria
 
Word Originlate 17th cent. (denoting ‘well-being produced in a sick person by the use of drugs’): modern Latin, from Greek, from euphoros ‘borne well, healthy’, from eu ‘well’ + pherein ‘to bear’.