You don’t look very valentines gifts for gym guys today. We are happy to announce the engagement of our daughter. These words all describe people feeling happy about something that has happened or is going to happen. She was glad when the meeting was over.
She was very pleased with her exam results. The boss should be glad with you. You’ll be relieved to know your jobs are safe. I was thrilled to be invited.
I looked around at all the happy faces. For the first time in her life, she felt truly happy. I can die happy knowing that I have achieved this. I’m just happy to be back home. Find the answers with Practical English Usage online, your indispensable guide to problems in English. Join our community to access the latest language learning and assessment tips from Oxford University Press!
Look up any word in the dictionary offline, anytime, anywhere with the Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary app. Find out which words work together and produce more natural sounding English with the Oxford Collocations Dictionary app. It had been a gloriously happy time. I don’t know what you’ve done, but the boss isn’t happy.
Are you happy with that arrangement? I’m not happy with his work this term. If there’s anything you’re not happy about, come and ask. These words all describe feeling, showing or giving pleasure. She’s never satisfied with what she’s got. Dad seemed perfectly happy with my explanation. I was quite happy with the way things went.
He went home from time to time, to keep his mother happy. Her boss was not entirely happy about the situation. I’m not too happy about her attitude. He is in the happy position of never having to worry about money. By a happy chance, I got a hotel room just five minutes from the university. I picked the restaurant pretty much at random, but it proved a happy choice all round.
That wasn’t the happiest choice of words. She wasn’t a happy bunny at all. She tried to strike a happy medium between making the questions too hard and making them too easy. Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. We all like Christmas jumpers, and by like I mean put up with. So how could we possibly make them even better?