See Also: exhilarate(dictionary)
exhilarate(dictionary)

antipathy (oh) and exhilarate (iou)


antipathy (oh)



[Date: 1500-1600; Language: Latin; Origin: antipathia, from Greek, from antipathes 'of opposite feelings', from anti- ( ANTI-) + pathos 'experience']
formal a feeling of strong dislike towards someone or something
antipathy to/towards
::a growing antipathy towards the government
antipathy between
::There's always been a certain amount of antipathy between the two doctors.

exhilarate (iou)



exhilarate verb trans. M16.
[Latin exhilarat- pa. ppl stem of exhilarare, formed as EX-1 1 + hilaris cheerful: see -ATE3.]
Make cheerful or merry; enliven, gladden; thrill, invigorate.
Dickens It seemed greatly to delight and exhilarate him to say so. A. Wilson The exhilarating weather of April with its lively south-east breezes. A. McCowen I was also exhilarated by the sense of power that I felt on the stage.
exhilaratingly adverb in an exhilarating manner M19.
exhilarative adjective tending to exhilarate E19.
exhilarator noun (rare) a person who or thing which exhilarates E19.