Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun Plural form of exuberance.

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word exuberances.

Examples

  • Rising early Sunday morning for an ambitious jog, I realized I was not the only one ready to forget the exuberances of the last few weeks - there was a an army of city employees filling the streets, dismantling the bleachers and cleaning up the debris of Cochabamba's great hoorah.

    Nathaniel Loewentheil: Deviled Dancers, Drunken Pilgrimages and the Magic of Bolivia's Carnaval 2010

  • I was not unused to the hubbub of foreign languages: a Greek-speaking family lived across the street, the greengrocer on the corner was Lebanese, and our own building vibrated with Neapolitan and Yiddish exuberances.

    What Happened to the Baby? 2006

  • My mother was shy, quietly clever with numbers, but always there to rein in my father when his exuberances got the better of him.

    The Hundred-Foot Journey Richard C. Morais 2008

  • My mother was shy, quietly clever with numbers, but always there to rein in my father when his exuberances got the better of him.

    The Hundred-Foot Journey Richard C. Morais 2008

  • My mother was shy, quietly clever with numbers, but always there to rein in my father when his exuberances got the better of him.

    The Hundred-Foot Journey Richard C. Morais 2008

  • I was not unused to the hubbub of foreign languages: a Greek-speaking family lived across the street, the greengrocer on the corner was Lebanese, and our own building vibrated with Neapolitan and Yiddish exuberances.

    What Happened to the Baby? 2006

  • I was not unused to the hubbub of foreign languages: a Greek-speaking family lived across the street, the greengrocer on the corner was Lebanese, and our own building vibrated with Neapolitan and Yiddish exuberances.

    What Happened to the Baby? 2006

  • My mother was shy, quietly clever with numbers, but always there to rein in my father when his exuberances got the better of him.

    The Hundred-Foot Journey Richard C. Morais 2008

  • It has allowed us to care about these irrational exuberances long after many people forget what college they went to.

    ready for your close-up, Mr. Roper 2005

  • It has allowed us to care about these irrational exuberances long after many people forget what college they went to.

    when we come marching 2005

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.