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Triumph   /trˈaɪəmf/   Listen
Triumph

noun
1.
A successful ending of a struggle or contest.  Synonym: victory.  "The general always gets credit for his army's victory" , "Clinched a victory" , "Convincing victory" , "The agreement was a triumph for common sense"
2.
The exultation of victory.
verb
(past & past part. triumphed; pres. part. triumphing)
1.
Prove superior.  Synonym: prevail.
2.
Be ecstatic with joy.  Synonyms: rejoice, wallow.
3.
Dwell on with satisfaction.  Synonyms: crow, gloat.
4.
To express great joy.  Synonyms: exuberate, exult, jubilate, rejoice.



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"Triumph" Quotes from Famous Books



... wish that you and Lucy could have been present last night and witnessed my scene of triumph. I was indeed most nobly welcomed. The scribe told me with sympathetic pride that the correspondent of the New York Herald had asked leave to attend, as he wished to telegraph my paper out to ...
— Immortal Memories • Clement Shorter

... foul, and to his dismay the leader of the freshmen felt himself falling. Browning fell with him, a cry of triumph coming to ...
— Frank Merriwell at Yale • Burt L. Standish

... Sevigne was virtuous—in that chief sense of feminine virtue—amid an almost universal empire of profligacy around her. Her social advantages were unsurpassed, and her social success was equal to her advantages. She had the woman courtier's supreme triumph in being once led out to dance by the king—her own junior by a dozen years—no vulgar king, remember, but the "great" Louis XIV. Her cynical cousin, himself a writer of power, who had been repulsed in dishonorable proffers of love by the young marchioness during the lifetime ...
— Classic French Course in English • William Cleaver Wilkinson

... said Count Robert; "were they to permit such treason to triumph, we might be pardoned for doubting ...
— Waverley Volume XII • Sir Walter Scott

... of Max toward Yolanda was a real triumph of skill and adroitness over inherited convictions and false education. She had brought him from condescension to deference solely by the magic of her art. Or am I wrong? Was it her artlessness? Perhaps it was her artful artlessness, since every girl-baby ...
— Yolanda: Maid of Burgundy • Charles Major


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