Sunny vs Ebullient - What's the difference?
sunny | ebullient | Related terms |
(of weather or a day) Featuring a lot of sunshine.
(of a place) Receiving a lot of sunshine.
(figuratively, of a person or a person's mood) Cheerful.
* Shakespeare
Of or relating to the sun; proceeding from, or resembling the sun; brilliant; radiant.
* Spenser
* Shakespeare
(US, regional) sunny side up
enthusiastic; high-spirited.
* Marina's oddly ebullient words seemed to come to her slow as balloons. - "Middle Age : A Romance" (2001) by (Fourth Estate, paperback edition, 233)
(of a liquid) boiling or agitated as if boiling
Sunny is a related term of ebullient.
As adjectives the difference between sunny and ebullient
is that sunny is (of weather or a day) featuring a lot of sunshine while ebullient is enthusiastic; high-spirited.As an adverb sunny
is (us|regional) sunny side up.As a noun sunny
is a sunfish.sunny
English
Adjective
(er)- Whilst it may be sunny today, the weather forecast is predicting rain.
- the sunny side of a hill
- I would describe Spain as sunny , but it's nothing in comparison to the Sahara.
- a sunny disposition
- My decayed fair / A sunny look of his would soon repair.
- sunny beams
- sunny locks