0 extreme happiness, sometimes more than is reasonable in a particular situation: --
1 a feeling of extreme happiness or confidence: --
The euphoria that followed the proclamation of the electoral results may have been exaggerated.
The early euphoria of parallel functional programming has worn off, but the fun has not.
Asking the patient, in this case a child, does not necessarily provide help because the concept of euphoria may be foreign to the youngster.
In our experience, euphoria, in contrast to silly, disinhibited behavior, is rarely observable in children in an office setting.
Physicians may create euphoria with opiates in a patient who is seriously ill but not moribund.
After all, the patient's experiential condition is tolerable if not actually pleasant, and drug euphoria eliminates competency.
It began an era of euphoria and excitement.
The initial euphoria over these methods overshadowed the more classical work being done in the ' mundane ' areas of basic biochemistry such as cell signalling.