Taxonomy of meanings for 愉:
- 愉 yú (OC: lo MC: jio) 羊朱切 平 廣韻:【恱也和也樂也 】
- HAPPY
- vibe mildly happy; be amused; be happily at ease; feel contentment
- vtoNfind amusing
- vt+prep+Nfeel mildly happy with; feel happily at ease with
- vi.redintensitiveshow mild happiness
- nabpsychhappiness
- vtoNcausativecause to be amused
- vadNhappy
- vi.redbe all at ease and happy; be completely relaxed
- visubject=nonhumancausing happiness> be amusing, be profoundly pleasant
- HOSPITALITY
-
PEACEFUL
- vibe mildly happy and unperturbedCH
- = 歈
- = 俞
- HAPPY
Additional information about 愉
說文解字: 【愉】,薄也。从心、俞聲。《論語》曰:私覿愉愉如也。 【羊朱切】 〔小徐本此字次於「㥒」字之後。〕
- Criteria
- DELIGHT
1. The general current word referring to the purely psychological notion of a transitory or temporary feeling of pleasure or delight is yuè 悅 (ant. yùn 慍 "feel intensely dissatisfied with, feel offended by").
2. The equally current lè 樂 (ant. āi 哀 "grief") adds to yuè 悅 the dimensions of practical indulgence, psychological and often philosophical depth, and - very often - a dimension of joy that can be shared and appreciated by others, and that is typically lasting if not permanent. See ENJOY
3. Xǐ 喜 (ant. yōu 憂 "worry") is openly manifested delight, manifested in an individual, visible to all, but not normally of any profound significance.
4. Huān 歡 (ant. bēi 悲 "sadness" and chóu 愁 "worried sadness") refers to sociable temporary high spirits, not only visible to many but normally shared by a group.
5. Kuài 快 refers to momentary elation related to or intense satisfaction with a concrete situation.
6. Xīn 欣 refers to grateful delight in what is designed to gratify one's desires.
7. Yú 娛 is often causative "give pleasure to", and when intransitive the word refers to a mild feeling of well-being and gratification, very close to yú 愉 "mild delight".
8. Yí 怡 refers to a kind of open unhidden dignified satisfaction.
- HAPPY
1. Fú 福 (ant. huò 禍 "misfortune") is the most common noun for material good fortune and well-being.
2. Lè 樂 refers specifically to happiness as a rewarding inward state.
3. Huān 歡 / 驩 / 懽 refers to a sometimes transitory form of sociable and communicative happiness.
4. Xǐ 喜 typically refers to happiness as a response to something.
5. Yú 愉 / 媮 refers to happy contentment with things as they are.
6. Kuài 快 refers to a transient, acute state of happiness.
7. Yú 娛 (ant yo1u 憂 "worry") typically refers to indulgent happiness with thing as they are.
8. Yì 懌 is an ancient poetic word referring to dignified contentment, and the word became current in the negative 不懌 "be displeased".
9. Yí 怡 is a fairly rare elevated poetic word referring to the state of being pleased, contented, and thus happy.
10. Ān 安 can refer to happy peace of mind.
11. Yuè 悅 can come to refer to a happy state of contentment with what happens to one or around one.
12. Xìng 幸 "luck" can refer to to a serendipitously found state of happiness.
13. Qìng 慶 is an archaic way of referring to material as well as psychological well-being.
14. Kāng 康 is an archaic way of referring to material and physical well-being.
- ANGUISH
[IMPERSONAL/PERSONAL]
[PRECISE/VAGUE]
[POETIC/PROSAIC]
[LASTING/TRANSITORY]
1. Jí 疾 (ant. kuài 快 "be delighted") is acute temporary or momentary anguish directed at a definite cause of dissatisfaction. See also HATE.
[PRECISE], [TRANSITORY]
2. Yùn 慍 (ant. yú 愉 "feel generally pleased") is lingering or lasting somewhat milder and more diffuse dissatisfaction or anguish. See ANGER. The distinction is miserably uncertain in many contexts.
[OVERT], [LASTING]
3. Fèn 憤 "pent-up dissatisfaction and resentment" (ant.* chàng 暢 "vent one's feelings freely" is not a regular antonym that is stylistically acceptable in parallelism) can be a general feeling of dissatisfaction without any concrete person to be dissatisfied about. See also ANGER.
[COVERT], [IMPERSONAL], [INTENSE], [LASTING]
4. Chàng 悵 (ant. xīn rán 欣然 "be pleased with oneself") is poetic and intensely personal without being directed at any particular person, and involves a strong element of despondency.
[INTENSE], [IMPERSONAL], [LASTING], [POETIC]; [[RARE]]
- Word relations
- Ant: (HAPPY)憂/WORRY
The current general term for all sorts of troubled states of mind, as well as reasons for such states of mind, is yōu 憂 (ant. xǐ 喜 "be well pleased" and lè 樂 "feel deep joy"), and this word may freely refer to troublesome matters of the present or of the future, and the word typiccally refers to a termporary state of hightened awareness of what is troublesome and concern about what should be done about it. - Assoc: (HAPPY)恬/PEACEFUL
Tián 恬 and dàn 淡 (all ant. dòng dàng 動蕩 "be all over the place) refer to serenity in an individual as cultivated, notoriously, by the Taoists.