It's the word of the day for October 25th.
Today's word is euphoria, spelled E-U-P-H-O-R-I-A.
Euphoria is a noun.
It refers to a feeling of great happiness and excitement.
Here's the word used in a sentence from The Shadow Cabinet, a novel by Juno Dawson.
Kira picked up the crown where it had landed.
It was warm, but more than that, the metal seemed to pulse somehow,
like it was a living thing with a heartbeat of its own.
It almost buzzed in her hands, and she felt a gentle euphoria simply holding it.
Health and happiness are often linked, sometimes even in etymologies.
Today, euphoria generally refers to happiness,
but it comes from euphoros, a Greek word that means healthy.
Given that root, it's unsurprising that in its original English uses, euphoria was a medical term.
A medical dictionary published in 1881, for example, defines euphoria as well-being,
or the perfect ease and comfort of healthy persons,
especially when the sensation occurs in a sick person.
And the second edition of our own Unabridged Dictionary, published in 1934,
labels euphoria as a psychological term, meaning a sense of well-being and buoyancy.
The idea of buoyancy also connects to the words Greek roots.
Euphoros comes from a combination of the prefix u, e, u,