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 joy [dʒɔɪ]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 欢喜, 乐事, 高兴

vt. 使快乐, 令人高兴

vi. 欢喜




    joy
    [ noun ]
    1. the emotion of great happiness

    2. <noun.feeling>
    3. something or someone that provides a source of happiness

    4. <noun.cognition>
      a joy to behold
      the pleasure of his company
      the new car is a delight
    [ verb ]
    1. feel happiness or joy

    2. <verb.emotion> rejoice
    3. make glad or happy

    4. <verb.emotion>
      gladden


    Joy \Joy\ (joi), n. [OE. joye, OF. joye, joie, goie, F. joie, L.
    gaudia, pl. of gaudium joy, fr. gaudere to rejoice, to be
    glad; cf. Gr. gai`ein to rejoice, gay^ros proud. Cf. {Gaud},
    {Jewel}.]
    1. The passion or emotion excited by the acquisition or
    expectation of good; pleasurable feelings or emotions
    caused by success, good fortune, and the like, or by a
    rational prospect of possessing what we love or desire;
    gladness; exhilaration of spirits; delight.

    Her heavenly form beheld, all wished her joy.
    --Dryden.

    Glides the smooth current of domestic joy.
    --Johnson.

    Who, for the joy that was set before him, endured
    the cross, despising the shame. --Heb. xii. 2.

    Tears of true joy for his return. --Shak.

    Joy is a delight of the mind, from the consideration
    of the present or assured approaching possession of
    a good. --Locke.

    2. That which causes joy or happiness.

    For ye are our glory and joy. --1 Thess. ii.
    20.

    A thing of beauty is a joy forever. --Keats.

    3. The sign or exhibition of joy; gayety; mirth; merriment;
    festivity.

    Such joy made Una, when her knight she found.
    --Spenser.

    The roofs with joy resound. --Dryden.

    Note: Joy is used in composition, esp. with participles, to
    from many self-explaining compounds; as, joy-bells,
    joy-bringing, joy-inspiring, joy-resounding, etc.

    Syn: Gladness; pleasure; delight; happiness; exultation;
    transport; felicity; ecstasy; rapture; bliss; gayety;
    mirth; merriment; festivity; hilarity.


    Joy \Joy\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. {Joyed} (joid); p. pr. & vb. n.
    {Joying}.] [OF. joir, F. jouir. See {Joy}, n.]
    To rejoice; to be glad; to delight; to exult.

    I will joy in the God of my salvation. --Hab. iii.
    18.

    In whose sight all things joy. --Milton.


    Joy \Joy\, v. t.
    1. To give joy to; to congratulate. [Obs.] ``Joy us of our
    conquest.'' --Dryden.

    To joy the friend, or grapple with the foe. --Prior.

    2. To gladden; to make joyful; to exhilarate. [Obs.]

    Neither pleasure's art can joy my spirits. --Shak.

    3. To enjoy. [Obs.] See {Enjoy}.

    Who might have lived and joyed immortal bliss.
    --Milton.

    1. The question from Jessica Lee of USA Today about the handsome teen-ager Bush calls his "pride and joy" struck a nerve in what was otherwise an unflappable performance by the early-rising president.
    2. "If anything, they're jumping up and down with joy," said Howard Stein, chairman of Dreyfus Corp.
    3. They meet in groups to grieve, they call each other at 3 a.m. to sob, they savor a unique joy with the coming of new mornings, the sight of sunsets.
    4. Students stuck taking Russian by default don't give their teachers much joy.
    5. The explosion of joy in Wenceslas Square when the hated leaders that suppressed the Prague Spring reforms 20 years ago had to step down.
    6. For some aged 80, perhaps having to list only 20 birthdays is a joy.
    7. "Today is a day of joy for all Germans," said Kohl.
    8. "Can he study how to bring joy into his playing?"
    9. There is hardly anything a temple of gastronomy will not do to enhance the joy of eating.
    10. In Philadelphia, leaders of about 30 organizations that had banded together to fight Uptown expressed joy that the company decided to heed their opposition.
    11. Many speakers expressed joy and wonder that a playwright and former political prisoner now leads a nation.
    12. These new businesses provide jobs for Koreans and provide a certain joy to people's lives while raising their standards of living.
    13. But the joy of gardening itself seems diminished.
    14. Lifting of the ration system after seven years caused no joy since meat was so scarce.
    15. "This has been unexplainable joy," Paul Daniluk said. "God has permitted me to know and be able to express my love to my mother." Daniluk, 68, of Denver, was 4 in 1925 when he and his father survived the fire in upstate New York.
    16. An obstreperous parliament is a joy to behold.
    17. We leave the front door looking for joy and jollity; we reach the cinema to be greeted by strangely-dressed persons shrieking 'Trick or treat?' Addams Family Values is no treat and could well be investigated under charges of trickery.
    18. Solidarity leader Lech Walesa in Poland welcomed the choice of Havel "with great joy" and wished him strength in carrying out his new responsibilities, according to the official Polish PAP news agency.
    19. An overall index of the emotional, physical and spiritual health of parish priests showed that 56 percent find "joy and satisfaction" in their work and that another third said the ministry was fulfilling though not always pleasant.
    20. The day of her christening we wept with joy.
    21. Even though we are required to use cars of the same vintage as the original London to Sydney marathon of 25 years ago, it is certainly no joy ride. Cars and drivers are being tested to the limit.
    22. And a successful staging of the Summer Olympics would find him doing a "dance of joy."
    23. Farrell ended his 12-year pastoral duties at St. Agnes Friday amid tears of joy and sorrow from about 20 parishioners.
    24. Music had appeal, but art seemed to offer the best environment to get the Capital House message across. Based in Edinburgh with a budget of Pounds 100,000, Ellwood first approached the Scottish Arts Council but received no joy.
    25. While we wouldn't want to deny that some Democrats really do want to be fair to Judge Bork, we suspect they also worry that the joy riders on the anti-Bork bandwagon may take the Democratic Party right off a cliff.
    26. Instead of keeping the infiltrator under wraps, they unceremoniously dumped Miss O'Connor off the train at Parkersburg, W.Va., to whoops of joy from reporters who had been attracted by Mr. Gold's cries of outrage.
    27. What the Art Deco moment did achieve, particularly in its more triumphant manifestations in New York, was a sense of stylistic climax, a flash of joy that is rare indeed in architecture and perhaps belongs most of all in the theatre.
    28. I know the joy that is there in so many people's hearts.
    29. Rayer has Waterman's timing, Clement is a joy to watch, the complete player; the Welsh are blessed with such a choice. Paul Hull is the first modern fullback the England team has had.
    30. Both families shared their feelings publicly last week through tears: tears of joy for the Twiggs that they had found their lost daughter and tears of pain for Mays, who had to explain to his only child she wasn't his biological daughter.
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