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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a ecstatic" is not correct in English.
Did you mean "an ecstatic"? You can use "an ecstatic" when describing someone who is experiencing intense joy or excitement.
Example: "After receiving the good news, she was an ecstatic participant in the celebration."
Alternatives: "a euphoric" or "a thrilled".
Exact(2)
The way Rauhofer treats this infectious little pop song, its words melt into a ecstatic blur.
Along with regulars like Soul Clap, Wolf + Lamb, and No Regular Play, the party will feature French disco-edit king, Dimitri from Paris, who has sent over a ecstatic live mix recorded at the 20th anniversary of the monthly Motown Party in his hometown.
Similar(58)
He became a poet, an ecstatic and in the end he matured through that love.
It can be an ecstatic encounter; an unsentimental contract; or an illusion, best treated with scepticism.
Barber talks about Kleiber as a perfectionist and an ecstatic.
He was rewarded with, if not an ecstatic welcome, a surprisingly warm one.
What follows is a portion of an "ecstatic dialogue" I had with Richard.
For a man who claimed an "ecstatic prescience of the glories beyond the grave", it was a fitting existence.
He seems to strive to provoke an ecstatic reaction, like a clean-cut cross between James Brown and an evangelical preacher.
My mother replied with an ecstatic grin and a hug: "Deborah!
And he knew, crucially, that Alex would harbor a highly implausible passion: an ecstatic love of classical music.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com