The Lexicon of FeelingAll wordsInteractive app

Bliss

[blɪs] · bliss · English · noun
positiveintensity: highjoy

Complete, serene happiness.

Definition

Complete, serene happiness — perfect felicity, often with a spiritual or otherworldly completeness.

Connotation & usage

The calm, still, fulfilled pole of the family: perfect happiness rather than excited arousal, leaning toward paradise, heaven, and nirvana (“wedded bliss,” “eternal bliss,” “sheer bliss”). Settled and serene where exhilaration is adrenaline and euphoria a possibly precarious high; quiet and inward where jubilation is a public display; restful felicity rather than the transported trance of ecstasy or rapture. Close to contentment but more intense and complete (“ignorance is bliss,” “follow your bliss”).

Related words

Etymology

Old English blis, bliðs “bliss, merriment, happiness, grace,” from Proto-Germanic, related to blithe “gentle, kind” — not to any “carry” root. Influenced by the unrelated word bless.

How it has changed

From mostly earthly happiness in Old English to “perfect felicity, the joy of heaven” already in late Old English, a sense that persists. A documented recent development: the U.S. colloquial verb “bliss out” (c. 1973).

Sources

Explore “Bliss” in the interactive dictionary →
From The Lexicon of Feeling — a carefully sourced dictionary & thesaurus of emotions across 60 languages. Definitions are verified against the cited sources; emotion-family, valence, and intensity tags are editorial. This is a learning tool for emotional vocabulary, not therapy or a substitute for professional care. © 2026 The Lexicon of Feeling.