triumph
Oxford 5000 vocabulary |C1|Oxford 1001 vocabularyTOEFL vocabularyIELTS vocabulary tri‧umph /ˈtraɪəmf/ noun
triumph verb [intransitive]
پیروز شدن
پیروزی، جشن پیروزی، پیروزمندانه، فتح و ظفر، طاق نصرت، غالب آمدن
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Synonyms & Related Words triumph[noun]Synonyms:- joy, elation, exultation, happiness, jubilation, pride, rejoicing
- success, accomplishment, achievement, attainment, conquest, coup, feat, victory
[verb]Synonyms:- often with over: win, overcome, prevail, prosper, succeed, vanquish
- rejoice, celebrate, crow, exult, gloat, glory, revel
Antonyms: defeat, fail
Contrasted words: lose
Related Idioms: get the best (
or better) of
Related Words: ascendancy,
gain,
surmounting,
vanquishing,
vanquishment,
joy,
festivity,
merriment,
reveling,
gloat,
prosper,
succeed,
conquer,
surmount
English Thesaurus: upset, hurt, distressed, distraught, in a (terrible) state, ... [TahlilGaran] English Synonym Dictionary ▲
English Dictionary Triumph trademark an type of
motorcycle made by the British company Triumph, which is known for being well-made in a traditional way. The Triumph company also used to make
sports cars.
[TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
I. tri‧umph1 /ˈtraɪəmf/
noun[
Date: 1300-1400;
Language: Old French;
Origin: triumphe, from Latin triumphus]
1. [countable] an important victory or success after a difficult struggle:
Winning the championship is a great personal triumph.triumph for a tremendous diplomatic triumph for Francetriumph over the triumph over hardship2. [uncountable] a feeling of pleasure and satisfaction that you get from victory or success:
a shout of triumphin triumph He rode in triumph to the Tsar.3. [singular] a very successful example of something
triumph of The gallery is a triumph of design. [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
II. triumph2 verb [intransitive] formal to gain a victory or success after a difficult struggle
triumph over In the end, good shall triumph over evil. [TahlilGaran] Dictionary of Contemporary English ▲
Collocations triumph noun ADJ. great, major, remarkable, resounding | little, minor | final, ultimate | latest, new Hollywood's favourite actor was modest about his latest triumph.
diplomatic, election, electoral, military, political | personal VERB + TRIUMPH score The union scored a triumph in negotiating a minimum wage within the industry.
hail sth as, see sth as They hailed the signing of the agreement as a major diplomatic triumph. PREP. in ~ The leading runner raised his arms in triumph.
~ against their recent triumph against Brazil triumph against seemingly insuperable odds
~ for The match was a personal triumph for Rivaldo.
~ in their triumph in the general election
~ over Her Wimbledon victory was hailed as a triumph over adversity. PHRASES a moment of triumph, a sense of triumph [TahlilGaran] Collocations Dictionary ▲
triumph verb ADV. eventually, finally, ultimately She was confident that she would ultimately triumph over adversity. PREP. over [TahlilGaran] Collocations Dictionary ▲
Thesaurus upset [not before noun] unhappy and worried because something unpleasant or disappointing has happened:
Miss Hurley is too upset to speak to anyone at the moment. She’s still deeply upset about her uncle’s death. He’s upset that he didn’t get an invitation to their wedding.hurt upset and shocked because someone has been unkind to you, especially someone that you trusted and thought was a friend:
Bill felt deeply hurt when he realized she had lied to him. Gretta was really hurt that none of her friends came to visit her in the hospital. Jackson was said to be ‘deeply hurt’ by the newspaper reports about him. He had a hurt expression on his face.distressed very upset:
Priests have been counselling distressed relatives of the victims. She was visibly distressed after hearing of her husband’s accident. Matilda was too distressed to speak.distraught written so upset and worried that you are unable to do normal things, and nothing can make you feel calm:
Benson was so distraught over the breakup of his marriage that he felt like committing suicide. The distraught parents of the missing baby have made a public appeal for her return.in a (terrible) state British English informal so upset that you cannot stop crying:
She called me one night in a terrible state, saying she wanted to die. I could see that she was in a bit of a state.be worked up informal to be very upset or angry, so that you think things are worse than they really are:
I was too worked up to sleep. It’s not worth getting worked up about. Anyone can make a mistake.victory noun [uncountable and countable] a situation in which you win a battle, game, election, or
dispute:
The crowds celebrated Italy’s victory against England. The party won a comfortable victory in the general election. We’re very confident of victory.win noun [countable] a victory in a sports game or in a competition:
It was an important win for the Yankees. A couple from London are celebrating a big lottery win.triumph noun [countable] written an important victory, especially in war or politics:
Thatcher’s greatest triumph was becoming the UK’s first female Prime Minister.conquest noun [countable] a situation in which one country wins a war against another country and takes control of it:
the Spanish conquest of Mexico Caesar is well-known for his military conquests.landslide noun [countable] an election victory in which one party or
candidate gets far more votes than their opponents:
In 1945, there was a Labour landslide.walkover especially British English,
cakewalk American English noun [countable] informal a very easy victory:
The match was expected to be a walkover for Brazil. [TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus ▲
victory noun [uncountable and countable] a situation in which you win a battle, game, election, or
dispute:
The crowds celebrated Italy’s victory against England. The party won a comfortable victory in the general election. We’re very confident of victory.win noun [countable] a victory in a sports game or in a competition:
It was an important win for the Yankees. A couple from London are celebrating a big lottery win.triumph noun [countable] written an important victory, especially in war or politics:
Thatcher’s greatest triumph was becoming the UK’s first female Prime Minister.conquest noun [countable] a situation in which one country wins a war against another country and takes control of it:
the Spanish conquest of Mexico Caesar is well-known for his military conquests.landslide noun [countable] an election victory in which one party or
candidate gets far more votes than their opponents:
In 1945, there was a Labour landslide.walkover especially British English,
cakewalk American English noun [countable] informal a very easy victory:
The match was expected to be a walkover for Brazil.upset noun [countable] a situation in which the person, team, party etc that was expected to win is defeated:
Truman pulled off the greatest election upset in United States history.come first/be first to win a race or competition:
Our team came first. Jo was first in the race and I was second.finish in first place (
also come in first) to win a race, competition, or election:
The Democratic candidate finished in first place. I couldn’t believe it when the horse I chose came in first.come out on top informal to win a game, competition, argument etc:
United came out on top after a thrilling game. They did a survey and the Swedish car-maker came out on top. If you try to argue with him, he always comes out on top.be leading/be in the lead to be winning a game, race election etc at the moment:
The High School team are leading with sixty points. With only two minutes left to play, we were still in the lead.be ahead to be doing better than someone else in a game, competition, or election:
He’s still fifty seconds ahead of his nearest rival. A week before the election, they were still ahead in the polls. [TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus ▲
win to be the best or most successful in a competition, game, election etc:
Italy won the World Cup in 2006. He has a realistic chance of winning the Championship.come first/be first to win a race or competition:
Our team came first. Jo was first in the race and I was second.finish in first place (
also come in first) to win a race, competition, or election:
The Democratic candidate finished in first place. I couldn’t believe it when the horse I chose came in first.triumph written to win a great victory, especially after a long and difficult battle, game etc:
Britain triumphed over its enemies. In the end, the Yankees triumphed.come out on top informal to win a game, competition, argument etc:
United came out on top after a thrilling game. They did a survey and the Swedish car-maker came out on top. If you try to argue with him, he always comes out on top.be leading/be in the lead to be winning a game, race election etc at the moment:
The High School team are leading with sixty points. With only two minutes left to play, we were still in the lead.be ahead to be doing better than someone else in a game, competition, or election:
He’s still fifty seconds ahead of his nearest rival. A week before the election, they were still ahead in the polls.winner the person or thing that wins a race, competition etc:
A prize of £500 will be awarded to the winner.the winning team/player/horse etc the one that wins:
The winning team will go through to the grand final in Milan.champion (
also the title holder American English) someone who has won a competition, especially in sport:
He became the heavyweight boxing champion.record-holder someone who has achieved the fastest speed, the longest distance etc in a sport:
the world high-jump record-holdera big win (=an important win, or one that you win by a large amount) This is one of the biggest wins I’ve had.an easy win The Australian appeared to be heading for an easy win.a comfortable win (=one that you win by a large amount, so that you do not have to worry about winning) Chelsea had a comfortable win against Crystal Palace.a convincing win especially British English (=a win by a large amount) Scotland cruised to a convincing win over Ireland.a five-point/two-goal etc win The team had a nine-point win over Arizona.have/score a win We haven’t had a win for three games.notch up a win (=achieve a win) Escude has now notched up three consecutive wins over him.pull off a win (=win when it is difficult to win) The side has pulled off two excellent wins in the past couple of weeks.clinch a win (=finally win after a difficult contest) He suffered some anxious moments before clinching a 9–6 win over Dennis Taylor last night.cruise to a win (=win easily) Arsenal cruised to a win over Chelsea.victory noun [uncountable and countable] a situation in which you win a battle, game, election, or
dispute:
The crowds celebrated Italy’s victory against England. The party won a comfortable victory in the general election. We’re very confident of victory.conquest noun [countable] a situation in which one country wins a war against another country and takes control of it:
the Spanish conquest of Mexico Caesar is well-known for his military conquests.landslide noun [countable] an election victory in which one party or
candidate gets far more votes than their opponents:
In 1945, there was a Labour landslide.walkover especially British English,
cakewalk American English noun [countable] informal a very easy victory:
The match was expected to be a walkover for Brazil.upset noun [countable] a situation in which the person, team, party etc that was expected to win is defeated:
Truman pulled off the greatest election upset in United States history. [TahlilGaran] English Thesaurus ▲