0 past simple and past participle of exult
1 to express great pleasure or happiness, especially at someone else's defeat or failure:
Under conditions of greater economic insecurity, the material dimension of politics assumed an exulted status.
Whigs, conversely, exulted in partisan women and children.
I am told that tributes are reserved for more nominally exulted beings.
Having set up a nine-pin of his own fabrication, he exulted in exhibiting how dexterous he was in knocking it down.
Some have exulted in our difficulties.
Poetry exulted in a child as a form of immortality.
Garin exulted under the cheers of the crowd.