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Ebullient   /ɪbˈəljənt/   Listen
adjective
Ebullient  adj.  Boiling up or over; hence, manifesting exhilaration or excitement, as of feeling; effervescing. "Ebullient with subtlety." "The ebullient enthusiasm of the French."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Ebullient" Quotes from Famous Books



... notable of them are the schemes of a dictator, rather than of the adviser of a free Government. The essay is chiefly interesting as a monument of Defoe's marvellous force of mind, and strange mixture of steady sense with incontinent flightiness. There are ebullient sallies in it which we generally find only in the productions of madmen and charlatans, and yet it abounds in suggestions which statesmen might profitably have set themselves with due adaptations to carry into effect. The Essay on Projects might alone be adduced ...
— Daniel Defoe • William Minto

... with his world of moonshine, for here roars the Maine lumberjack with all the uncouth vigour and rude natural expressiveness of the living satyr. It is life; primal, uncovered, and unpolished—the ebullient, shouting ...
— Writings in the United Amateur, 1915-1922 • Howard Phillips Lovecraft

... along by my two sentries to a huge tree, not of the bandanna species. Beneath it a sugar-kettle filled with ebullient ...
— Atlantic Monthly, Volume 8, No. 47, September, 1861 • Various

... otherwise with the English-speaking races—loosely called Anglo-Saxon, They are powerfully sexed; their feelings and sentiments go deeper than is possible to those of more ebullient temperament but fatal clarity of vision; refinement of mind and habit and manner is perhaps the most precious of their achievements, and they have established a code which not only demands rectitude ...
— The Sisters-In-Law • Gertrude Atherton

... and the snapping time grew faster, until the dancers gasped, and men who wore long boots encouraged them with cries and stamped a staccato accompaniment upon the benches or on the floor. It was savage, rasping music, but one player infused into it the ebullient nerve of France, and the other was from the misty land where the fiddler learns the witchery of the clanging reel and the swing of the Strathspey. It is doubtless not high art, but there is probably no music in the world that fires the blood like this ...
— Masters of the Wheat-Lands • Harold Bindloss


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