pleased adjective – Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes | Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary at OxfordLearnersDictionaries.com
Synonyms
glad
glad
happy
▪
pleased
▪
delighted
▪
proud
▪
relieved
▪
thrilled
These words all describe people feeling happy about something that has happened or is going to happen.
glad
[not usually before noun] happy about something or grateful for it:
-
He was glad he’d come.
-
She was glad when the meeting was over.
[not usually before noun] happy about something or grateful for it:
happy
pleased about something nice that you have to do or something that has happened to somebody:
-
We are happy to announce the engagement of our daughter.
pleased about something nice that you have to do or something that has happened to somebody:
pleased
[not before noun] happy about something that has happened or something that you have to do:
-
She was very pleased with her exam results.
-
You’re coming? I’m so pleased.
[not before noun] happy about something that has happened or something that you have to do:
glad, happy or pleased?
Feeling
pleased
can suggest that you have judged somebody/something and approve of them. Feeling
glad
can be more about feeling grateful for something. You cannot be ‘glad with somebody’:
The boss should be glad with you.
Happy
can mean glad, pleased or satisfied.
delighted
very pleased about something; very happy to do something; showing your delight:
-
I’m delighted at your news.
Delighted
is often used to accept an invitation:
‘Can you stay for dinner?’ ‘I’d be delighted (to).’
very pleased about something; very happy to do something; showing your delight:
proud
pleased and satisfied about something that you own or have done, or are connected with:
-
proud parents
-
He was
proud of
himself for not giving up.
pleased and satisfied about something that you own or have done, or are connected with:
relieved
feeling happy because something unpleasant has stopped or has not happened; showing this:
-
You’ll be relieved to know your jobs are safe.
feeling happy because something unpleasant has stopped or has not happened; showing this:
thrilled
[not before noun] (
rather informal
) extremely pleased and excited about something:
-
I was thrilled to be invited.
[not before noun] () extremely pleased and excited about something:
delighted or thrilled?
Thrilled
may express a stronger feeling than
delighted
, but
delighted
can be made stronger with
absolutely
,
more than
or
only too
.
Thrilled
can be made negative and ironic with
not exactly
or
less than
:
She was
not exactly thrilled
at the prospect of looking after her niece.
Patterns
- glad/happy/pleased/delighted/relieved/thrilled
about
something
- pleased/delighted/relieved/thrilled
at
something
- glad/happy/pleased/delighted/thrilled
for
somebody
- glad/happy/pleased/delighted/proud/relieved/thrilled
that…/to see/hear/find/know…
-
very
glad/happy/pleased/proud/relieved
-
absolutely
delighted/thrilled