enjoyment
enjoyment — noun
1. the happy feeling you have when you do something you like or find interesting
the happy feeling you have when you do something you like or find interesting
The children smiled with real enjoyment as they played in the garden.
collocation: real / pure enjoyment
Salma gets a lot of enjoyment from reading books on long train trips.
collocation: get enjoyment from
Brian closed his eyes and listened to the song with quiet enjoyment.
Pim finds great enjoyment in painting pictures of trees and birds.
The enjoyment Tara felt while dancing was clear to everyone in the room.
- pleasure
broader term covering any positive feeling, not limited to active participation
- delight
stronger and more sudden than enjoyment, often about a specific moment
- satisfaction
focuses on fulfillment after achieving something, rather than the active feeling during an activity
- displeasure
a feeling of being unhappy or annoyed with something
用法筆記
This sense is usually uncountable. Common verb + noun patterns include 'get enjoyment from/out of', 'take enjoyment in', and 'find enjoyment in'.
常見錯誤
2. an activity, experience, or thing that makes you feel happy or satisfied
an activity, experience, or thing that makes you feel happy or satisfied
Gardening is one of grandmother's greatest enjoyments since she stopped working at the shop.
countable noun: one of the greatest enjoyments
Simple enjoyments like walking in the park help Talia relax after work.
collocation: simple enjoyments
The warm baths were a special enjoyment for the tired travelers after their long walk.
Asher's main enjoyment of the trip was tasting new food at the night market.
- chore
a duty or task that is unpleasant and brings no pleasure
用法筆記
In this sense, 'enjoyment' can be countable (e.g. 'one of my enjoyments is…') when referring to specific pleasurable activities or things. As an uncountable noun, it describes the general concept of pleasurable activities.
常見錯誤
3. the right granted by law to use property or receive its benefits as the owner
the right granted by law to use property or receive its benefits as the owner
The new law protects the public's enjoyment of the city parks and gardens.
legal context: enjoyment of [public resources]
Under the will, the widow has the enjoyment of the house for life.
The contract promises the tenant quiet enjoyment of the apartment for the lease period.
The court decided that the company had blocked the landowner's enjoyment of her fields.
- use
simpler, non-legal term for the right to make use of something
- possession
focuses on ownership or control rather than the right to benefit from use
- dispossession
the act of taking away someone's property or right to use it
用法筆記
Frequently appears in formal and legal texts, especially in the phrase 'quiet enjoyment' (the right of a tenant to use property without interference). The subject is usually a person or entity with a legal interest in the property, and the object is typically a type of asset (land, property, rights, benefits).