profuse in growth or production; luxuriant; superabundant: exuberant vegetation.
Origin of exuberant
1425–75; late Middle English <Latin exūberant- (stem of exūberāns), present participle of exūberāre, equivalent to ex-ex-1 + ūberāre to be fruitful (derivative of ūber fertile); see -ant
If Alibaba’s groundbreaking IPO represented the exuberant global mood of capital markets in 2014, Ant’s debut is the most high-profile reflection yet of how those same markets are now drifting apart.
Another Jack Ma company could break the world’s IPO record. But this time, the U.S. is missing out|Naomi Xu Elegant|September 21, 2020|Fortune
As exuberant as I tend to be, I did feel “knight” would be too melodramatic.
What Should I Call the Man I Love?|Dushka Zapata|November 18, 2014|DAILY BEAST
An exuberant game of football takes place, then the sound of shells is heard, and both sides repair back to their enemy positions.
How Monty The Penguin Won Christmas: Britain’s Epic, Emotional Commercials|Tim Teeman|November 16, 2014|DAILY BEAST
What separates the trolls from the exuberant or opinionated is anonymity.
Outed Madeleine McCann Troll Kills Herself. But Millions Live On Online.|Barbie Latza Nadeau|October 6, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Exuberant and creative, he moved to New York City at 19 to become a poet and a musician.
Hallucinating Away a Heroin Addiction|Abby Haglage|May 4, 2014|DAILY BEAST
The exuberant, indefatigable Democrat from Oregon and the dour, taciturn Republican from New Hampshire made an odd couple.
The Senate’s New Taxman Won’t Be Controlled By His Own Party|Linda Killian|February 18, 2014|DAILY BEAST
"We ran," cries Cecil, with her exuberant spirits in her tone.
Floyd Grandon's Honor|Amanda Minnie Douglas
In the exuberant fecundity of the Torrid Zone, the insects, those terrible destroyers of plant-life, carry off the superfluous.
The Bird|Jules Michelet
Commodus, as usual, too exuberant in the manner of his applause.
Lost Diaries|Maurice Baring
Even after repeated expeditions had discounted the exuberant optimism of this description, the Englishmen's faith did not wane.
Our Foreigners|Samuel P. Orth
They were written for Brotherson's eye—or so the father says—but she never sent them; too exuberant perhaps.
Initials Only|Anna Katharine Green
British Dictionary definitions for exuberant
exuberant
/ (ɪɡˈzjuːbərənt) /
adjective
abounding in vigour and high spirits; full of vitality
lavish or effusive; excessively elaborateexuberant compliments
growing luxuriantly or in profusion
Derived forms of exuberant
exuberance, nounexuberantly, adverb
Word Origin for exuberant
C15: from Latin exūberāns, from ūberāre to be fruitful, from ūber fertile