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Meraki

μεράκι · me-RA-kee · Greek (from Turkish) · noun
positiveintensity: mediumjoyanticipation

Doing something with soul, creativity, and love.

Definition

Doing something with soul, creativity, and love — putting yourself, and a loving care for quality, into your work.

Connotation & usage

About infusing a task with self and soul, not dutiful commitment (devotion) or psychological absorption (flow), and narrower and more craft-oriented than general passion — typically applied to creative or artisanal work (“she cooked this with meraki”). Where kefi is high-spirited celebratory joy, meraki is the loving care put into doing something well.

Literal sense

A loanword; roughly “passion, labor of love” (older sense also “yearning”).

Related words

Etymology

Borrowed from Ottoman Turkish merak (“desire, enthusiasm; curiosity”), ultimately from Arabic.

How it has changed

The Turkish source leaned toward “curiosity / desire / enthusiasm”; in Greek it shifted toward finding joy and soul in one's work, with a coexisting older sense of yearning/melancholy.

Dispute & caveat

Often marketed online as an “ancient Greek secret” — inaccurate: meraki is a relatively modern loanword from Turkish, not ancient Greek. The “untranslatable” framing romanticizes a straightforward “passion, zeal.”

Sources

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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.