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Pleasure

[ˈplɛʒər] · PLEH-zhur · English · noun
positiveintensity: mediumjoy

The agreeable feeling produced when a wish, appetite, or sense is gratified.

Definition

The agreeable feeling produced when a wish, appetite, or sense is gratified — the broadest, most neutral term in the family.

Connotation & usage

The broad hub from which enjoyment, joy, delight, satisfaction, and contentment all branch, and the one word spanning both sensory and emotional gratification (“simple pleasures,” “sensual pleasure”). Unmarked for intensity, duration, or trigger. Cooler and more neutral than the charged joy or delight; unlike satisfaction it needn't follow a need being met; it alone keeps an older “desire / will” sense (“what's your pleasure?”, “at the king's pleasure”).

Related words

Etymology

Late 14c. plesire, from Old French plaisir “enjoyment, delight, desire, will,” a noun use of the infinitive “to please,” from Latin placere “to please.” The ending shifted to -ure by analogy with measure, leisure.

How it has changed

The “desire / will” sense (“at one's pleasure”) is among the oldest; “feeling of enjoyment” is mid-15c.; “sensual gratification” early 15c. The verb (including a sexual sense, 1610s) followed. No sourced recent-generation shift.

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.