rhapsodic
adj.
full of enthusiasm, ecstatic; pertaining to rhapsody
Rhapsody
In art and literature, rhapsody may mean:
Rhapsody (music), an enthusiastic instrumental composition of indefinite form
Epic poem, or part of one, that is suitable for recitation at one time, such as a book of Homer's Odyssey. A performer of epic poetry in Ancient Greece was known as a
rhapsode
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rhapsodic
Adjective
1. feeling great rapture or delight
(synonym) ecstatic, enraptured, rapturous
(similar) joyous
Rhapsodic
(a.)
Of or pertaining to rhapsody; consisting of rhapsody; hence, confused; unconnected.
(a.)
Alt. of Rhapsodic
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), edited by Noah Porter.
About
rhapsodic
Synonyms and related words:
Alcaic, Anacreontic, Castalian, Homeric, Hudibrastic, Pierian, Pindaric, Theocritean, bardic, blissful, bucolic, bursting with happiness, carried away, delighted, didactic, dithyrambic, dramatic, eclogic, ecstatic, effusive, elate, elated, elegiac, enchanted, enraptured, enravished, enthusiastic, entranced, epic, euphoric, exalted, exultant, flushed, freaked out, heroic, high, idyllic, imparadised, in ecstasies, in heaven, in paradise, in raptures, in seventh heaven, intoxicated, jubilant, mock-heroic, narrative, on cloud nine, orgasmic, overjoyed, overjoyful, pastoral, poetic, poetico-mystical, poetico-mythological, poetico-philosophic, poetlike, possessed, rapt, raptured, rapturous, ravished, rhapsodical, runic, sapphic, sent, skaldic, thrilled, transported
Source: Moby Thesaurus, which is part of the
Moby Project created by Grady Ward. In 1996 Grady Ward placed this thesaurus in the public domain.