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Sehnsucht

[ˈzeːnˌzʊxt] · ZAYN-zookht · German · noun
mixedintensity: highsadnessanticipation

An intense, often painful longing or yearning.

Definition

An intense, often painful longing or yearning — typically for something ideal, unfinished, or unattainable.

Connotation & usage

More abstract and bittersweet than plain longing. Where Fernweh is longing for distant places and Heimweh is longing for home, Sehnsucht is a generalized, often object-less yearning for an ideal. Closely compared to Portuguese saudade.

Literal sense

sehnen “to long, yearn” + Sucht “craving; (archaically) sickness.” Sucht here traces to siech “sick,” not suchen “to seek” — so the older sense is closer to “yearning-sickness.”

Related words

Etymology

German: sehnen + Sucht, the latter tied historically to siech (“sick”) / Siechtum rather than to suchen.

How it has changed

In Middle High German the “sickness” sense was prominent; the word later shed the illness reference to mean intense longing. It became a central Romantic concept (Goethe, Schiller) and was adopted by C. S. Lewis for his idea of “Joy.” English adoption is reported (OED) from the 1840s — unverified directly.

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.