The Lexicon of FeelingAll wordsInteractive app

Ecstasy

[ˈɛkstəsi] · EK-stuh-see · English · noun
positiveintensity: highjoy

An overwhelming, self-transcending exaltation.

Definition

An overwhelming, self-transcending exaltation — rapturous delight so intense it approaches a trance.

Connotation & usage

With rapture, the top tier: an exaltation so consuming it verges on a trance and near-stillness, its root meaning “standing outside oneself,” swept past reason and self-command. It holds the religious and mystical “trance” sense most strongly, and — unlike rapture — can attach to any overpowering emotion (joy, fear, even rage), not bliss alone. A peak, absorbing state rather than a buoyant mood (euphoria), a stimulated thrill (exhilaration), or outward celebration (jubilation).

Senses & usage

Everyday

A state of overwhelming, rapturous delight.

The dominant modern positive sense (from the 1610s).

Mystical / religious

A trance in which the soul, exalted, contemplates the divine while the body is stilled.

The older sense, strong in 17th-century mystical writing; from Greek ekstasis, “standing outside oneself.”

The drug (capitalized “Ecstasy”)

The illicit drug MDMA.

Slang sense dated to 1985; now a standard capitalized dictionary sense.

Related words

Etymology

Late 14c., from Old French estaise, from Greek ekstasis “entrancement, displacement, a standing outside (oneself),” from existanai “to displace, drive out of one's mind” (ek “out” + histanai “to stand”).

How it has changed

Shifted from “trance / displacement of mind” toward “exalted good feeling” by the 1610s, aided by 17th-century mystical writers. A well-documented recent sense: the drug MDMA, from 1985.

Sources

Explore “Ecstasy” 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.