| A.Word.A.Day | About | Media | Search | Contact | 
| Home 
 | Sep 9, 2019This week’s theme There’s an antonym for it This week’s words eustress nullibiety excarnation dysphemism nocebo     Illustration: Tomi Dufva             A.Word.A.Daywith Anu Garg There’s matter and there’s anti-matter. Something similar works with words too. There are words and there are their opposites: if there’s utopia there’s dystopia too. It’s just that sometimes the opposite is not as popular, even though it’s a perfectly fine, upstanding citizen of the dictionary. In this week’s parade of words we bring such antonyms to the front. eustress
 PRONUNCIATION: MEANING: 
noun: A positive, beneficial form of stress.
 ETYMOLOGY: 
Coined by the endocrinologist Hans Selye (1907-1982). From Greek eu-
(good) + stress, from shortening of distress or from Old French estressei
(narrowness or oppression), from Latin strictus, from stringere (to bind
tight). Earliest documented use: 1950s.
 NOTES: 
Eustress is happy stress. Some examples of eustress are excitement at starting a new job, an
upcoming wedding, etc. In general, mild stress works as eustress, bringing
motivation and spurring action. Too much stress results in distress.
 USAGE: 
“Ann was mired ankle-deep in eustress. If she pulled one foot out of
its boot, where would she put that foot while she pulled the other
foot to freedom?” Elizabeth Schaeffer; The Skein; Trafford; 2012. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:There is no greatness where there is not simplicity, goodness, and truth.
-Leo Tolstoy, novelist and philosopher (9 Sep 1828-1910) | 
 | 
© 1994-2025 Wordsmith