Jubilant in a sentence as an adjective

When we got to 40 hours, beating everyone else, that was a very jubilant 6am.

Suddenly, they're jubilant and jumping all over the place.

It is just me or has the story evolved into something a bit less jubilant in the course of the last two hours.

Despite of the hindrances we have encountered along the way, I am humbled, awed and jubilant to have been a part of such a gesture.

Kind of like being forced to go to a jubilant party where everyone's singing and dancing the day after your best friend died, for example.

And then next week we will get an article on how not to alienate your readers with pointless, highfalutin language like "sagacious" and "jubilant.

I am personally jubilant about XP support being killed off, but don't delude yourself into thinking this means old IE versions will magically disappear overnight.

I had many interviews where the employer was jubilant at the end of the interview, and then 2 days later, HR called to tell me that they won't be taking on anyone who requires visa sponsorship.

Instead of getting written off during a downturn, jubilant markets will just keep throwing good money after bad managers, broken business models and overhyped vaporware.

However it's very much not at the jubilant level that's being spouted about by you among others - hence the suggestion to be a bit more humble.> Can you rephrase the question itself?Why should we accept that the only way to lift people out of poverty is by exploiting their cheap labour for a century for our own benefit when the resources are already available, just locally scarce?

He knew what those jubilant crowds did not know but could have learned from books: that the plague bacillus never dies or disappears for good; that it can lie dormant for years and years in furniture and linen- chests; that it bides its time in bedrooms, cellars, trunks, and bookshelves; and that perhaps the day would come when, for the bane and the enlightening of men, it would rouse up its rats again and send them forth to die in a happy city.

>>However it's very much not at the jubilant level that's being spouted about by you among othersWhich goes back to my earlier point, that the cause for jubilance is not in the current state of poverty, but in the rate at which it has improved, which is excellent by the only objective measure we have, which is in reference to other periods in history.>>Why should we accept that the only way to lift people out of poverty is by exploiting their cheap labour for a century for our own benefit when the resources are already available, just locally scarce?It's not that we have to only accept this method.

Jubilant definitions

adjective

joyful and proud especially because of triumph or success; "rejoicing crowds filled the streets on VJ Day"; "a triumphal success"; "a triumphant shout"

See also: exultant exulting prideful rejoicing triumphal triumphant

adjective

full of high-spirited delight; "a joyful heart"

See also: elated gleeful joyful