Jubilo in english
Joy
pronunciation: dʒɔɪ part of speech: noun
pronunciation: dʒɔɪ part of speech: noun
In gestures
jubilar = put out to + grass ; put out to + pasture.
Example: The article 'Should the computer be put out to grass?' argues that successful transfer of information relies more on quality than quantity.Example: Let the free market decide whether it wants to support Prince's way of doing business or it wants to put him out to pasture.more:
» jubilarse = retire .
Example: Staff leaving for other jobs, retiring or simply dying (the age profile is inexorably rising in most SLIS) are nor replaced.júbilo = elation ; jubilation ; glee ; joy ; jouissance ; gaiety ; merriment ; mirth ; jollity ; jolliness.
Example: She put her empty cup in the dirty-dish cart, and mounted on the wings of a pure and ingenuous elation the long flight of stairs leading to the offices on the first floor.Example: The letter sent Tomas Hernandez into a frenzy of conflicting reactions: ecstatic jubilation and ego-tripping, wild speculation and outrageous fantasy, compounded by confusion and indirection.Example: But we see the pain in a person's face, hear the glee in his chortles, perceive the affection in the looks and gestures of lovers.Example: In an authority list, the terms, whether descriptors or non-descriptors, may be single words (e.g., Hosiery, Journalism, Lingerie), or phrases of two or three words (e.g., Electric meters, Electric power plants, joy and sorrow).Example: The enjoyment of castigating Jade, of anticipating the derision and humilation she will face involves, undoubtedly, a classist jouissance.Example: There was a hype of gaiety and merriment in the air over the festive season.Example: There was a hype of gaiety and merriment in the air over the festive season.Example: The director continued speaking amid the embers of their mirth.Example: The more obvious effect is the public display of jollity that, when surrounded by others in the same spirit, brings an amazing energy and excitement to the air.Example: They say jolliness skips a generation.more:
» con júbilo = joyously ; gleefully .
Example: Wine lovers around the world have joyously adopted the British slang word 'plonk' to describe poor, cheap wine. Example: Nietzsche famously violates the rules of logic, gleefully engaging in the 'informal' fallacies, for example, in his appeals to emotions.