Word
Of
The
Day
exhilarate
exhilarate \ig-ZIL-uh-rayt\
verb
Exhilarate means "to cause (someone) to feel very happy and excited." It is usually used in the passive voice as
(be) exhilarated.
// She was
exhilarated by the prospect of attending her dream school.
See the entry >
Examples:
"I'll say it: winter is my favorite season for jazz in Chicago. Summer may be busier and splashier, but there's nothing quite like nestling into a darkened club, cheeks flushed from the cold, for a singular and inventive night of music. It does more than thaw frozen fingers: It
exhilarates, inspires and inflames, in the best way." — Hannah Edgar,
The Chicago Tribune, 11 Jan. 2026
Did you know?
Many people find
exhilarate a difficult word to spell. It's easy to forget that silent "h" in there, and is it an "er" or "ar" after the "l"? It may be easier to remember the spelling if you know that
exhilarate ultimately comes from the Latin adjective
hilarus, meaning "cheerful." (This also explains why the earliest meaning of
exhilarate is "to make cheerful.")
Exhilarate comes from
exhilaratus, a form of
exhilarare, which combines
ex- and
hilarare, a verb from
hilarus that means "to cheer or gladden." If
hilarus looks familiar, that may be because it's also the source of
hilarious and
hilarity (as well as
hilariously and
hilariousness, of course).