athrill

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English

Etymology

From a- +‎ thrill.

Pronunciation

Adjective

athrill

  1. Thrilled, feeling a thrill; trembling or vibrating (with an emotion, movement, etc.).
    • 1884, Margaret Oliphant, chapter 8, in Sir Tom, volume 3, London: Macmillan, page 121:
      [] an unfrequented path which lay still in the April sunshine, the lilac bushes standing up on each side all athrill and rustling with the spring,
    • 1908, Lucy Maud Montgomery, chapter 33, in Anne of Green Gables, Boston: L.C. Page, page 371:
      As Anne would have said at one time, it was “an epoch of her life,” and she was deliciously athrill with excitement of it.
    • 1926, James Oliver Curwood, chapter 10, in The Black Hunter, New York: Cosmopolitan Book Corporation:
      the passion of sublime emotion which seemed to set every living force in his body athrill

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