joydom

English

Etymology

From joy + -dom.

Noun

joydom (uncountable)

  1. (rare) The state or condition of joy or of being joyful; exhilaration; enjoyment.
    • 1943, Frank Alfred Lea, Carlyle: prophet of to-day:
      All the people are in a sort of joydom over the new French Republic,' he wrote to Emerson, 'which has descended suddenly (or shall we say, ascended, alas!) out of the Immensities upon us; []
    • 1950, Dornford Yates, Lower Than Vermin:
      I trust he is full with joydom to be with his scholars again." Not daring to trust her voice, Vivien inclined her head.
    • 1991, Xam Wilson Cartiér, Muse-echo blues:
      When you thought of Chicago, you thought of the joydom called Jazz.
    • 2005, Theodore Russell Weiss, Renée Karol Weiss, The Always Present Present: Letters, Poems:
      Your cummings joydom joydoms me. He has, as you see, that innocence & fraternity of things I love so much, that easy oneness with the world: the world in his hands is a sauntering along, a song, a gaiety as of a late spring rain []
    • 2007, Robert H. Cataliotti, The Songs Became the Stories:
      The association of Chicago with "the joydom of jazz" inspires Lena to name her son after the city, yet the impulse to find a creative outlet through the music is so strong that it prompts her to abandon her child when her husband attempts to stifle her creativity and career.
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