Definitionadj. full of or showing high-spirited merriment
Last update: September 3, 2019
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The boss seems to be in a jovial mood. [verb]
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Brother Viktor was large, extremely jovial and waving a penguin. [adjective]
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Despite the long sessions, there is a jovial atmosphere in the halls. [adjective]
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"Colbert adores the King, and is blind to his follies, which are no more economical than the vulgar pleasures of your jovial Rowley." [adjective]
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"Antony is now the jovial companion of his son, and permits Antyllus to share all his own pleasures." [adjective]
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The battalion commander perceived the jovial irony and laughed. [adjective]
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Then, in a jovial manner, he put about the glass, mingling his discourse to Betty with caresses and familiarities, that spoke him very happy in his amours. [adjective]
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Father Hucheloup was a jovial host. [adjective]
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Towards the middle of the last century a change took place, prison songs and thieves' ritournelles assumed, so to speak, an insolent and jovial mien. [adjective]
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