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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a happy room" is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe a room that has a cheerful or positive atmosphere, often due to its decor, lighting, or overall ambiance.
Example: "The bright colors and natural light made it feel like a happy room, perfect for gatherings with friends."
Alternatives: "a cheerful room" or "a joyful room".
Exact(4)
"It's a happy room," Kempner says.
Even if you can only make very minor alterations to your environment: finding a cushion for your chair, making the place smell of Marmite, because that's what a happy room smells like for you, changing a lampshade so the light doesn't tempt you to hang yourself every time you end a sentence.
A clean room is a happy room.
Don't be like "Oh great, I have to clean my room... ...... Instead be thinking, "A clean room is a happy room".
Similar(56)
The elephant in what was a pretty happy room is what now happens to local authority funding, as the arts and museums have proved something of a soft target for cash-strapped councils.
You'd get a house-y, techno-y room, then a jungle room, then a happy hardcore room.
It's a happy dressing room".
It is the sound of a happy dining room, the purr of hospitality.
"I've got a happy locker room in there right now," Memphis Coach John Calipari said.
It's pretty simple: if you have a happy changing room, you perform".
When you win every game fifty to thirteen, it's always a happy locker room.
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