Emotions in English
Words, phrases, and expressions for feelings — from chill to chaos.
English has about one million ways to say you feel something. (Okay, not literally. But emotionally… yes.)
Start with the core emotions, then level up with the “real-life” phrases people actually say when they’re thrilled, stressed, or quietly losing it.
If your go-to emotion words are only happy, sad, and angry, you’re not “simple.” You’re just under-equipped for group chats.
1) Core emotion cards (tap “Hear”)
Feeling good; positive mood.
Feeling unhappy or low.
Feeling mad; wanting to protest or react.
Feeling fear; worried about danger.
Feeling energized and looking forward to something.
Relaxed; not stressed.
Feeling shocked by something unexpected.
Feeling strong dislike; “ew.”
2) Emotions, phrases, and expressions
| Word / phrase | Meaning | Example | Hear |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🌤️ Positive & calm | |||
| joyful | Very happy, with a warm feeling. | She was joyful when she saw her friends. | |
| delighted | Very pleased (often polite and common in emails). | I’m delighted to meet you. | |
| content | Quietly happy and satisfied. | I’m content with a simple weekend. | |
| grateful | Thankful; appreciating help or kindness. | I’m grateful for your support. | |
| proud | Happy about your achievement (or someone else’s). | I’m proud of you. | |
| relieved | Stress goes down because the problem is over. | I’m relieved the exam is done. | |
| hopeful | Positive about the future. | We’re hopeful things will improve. | |
| confident | Sure you can do it; self-belief. | She feels confident about the interview. | |
| 🌧️ Sad & heavy | |||
| upset | Unhappy or bothered (very common, a bit general). | I’m upset about what happened. | |
| disappointed | Sad because something wasn’t as good as you hoped. | I’m disappointed with the result. | |
| heartbroken | Deeply sad (often about love or loss). | He was heartbroken after the breakup. | |
| lonely | Sad because you feel alone or not connected. | I felt lonely in a new city. | |
| homesick | Missing home (common for travel/study abroad). | She got homesick during the first week. | |
| miserable | Very unhappy or uncomfortable. | I was miserable in that cold rain. | |
| bored | Not interested; nothing feels engaging. | I’m bored in this meeting. | |
| 😬 Nervous & tense | |||
| anxious | Worried and uneasy; your brain won’t stop running. | I’m anxious about the deadline. | |
| nervous | Worried, especially before an event. | I’m nervous about speaking in public. | |
| stressed | Feeling pressure; too much to handle. | I’ve been stressed all week. | |
| overwhelmed | So stressed you can’t think clearly. | I’m overwhelmed with messages today. | |
| panicked | Sudden strong fear; rushing thoughts. | I panicked when I couldn’t find my passport. | |
| uneasy | Slightly nervous; something feels “off.” | I felt uneasy walking home late. | |
| 🔥 Angry & edgy | |||
| annoyed | Small anger; irritated. | I’m annoyed by the noise. | |
| frustrated | Angry because it’s not working or not improving. | I’m frustrated with this app. | |
| irritated | Annoyed, often a bit more formal than “annoyed.” | He sounded irritated on the call. | |
| furious | Very angry; intense. | She was furious about the lie. | |
| jealous | Unhappy because someone has what you want. | I felt jealous of his promotion. | |
| 🗣️ Idioms & everyday expressions | |||
| on cloud nine | Extremely happy. | I was on cloud nine after the good news. | |
| over the moon | Very happy (super common in UK and widely understood). | They’re over the moon about the baby. | |
| down in the dumps | Feeling sad and low. | He’s been down in the dumps lately. | |
| in a funk | Low mood for a while; not yourself. | I’m in a funk this week. | |
| butterflies in my stomach | Nervous excitement (often before a date or speech). | I had butterflies in my stomach before the presentation. | |
| see red | Suddenly get very angry. | I saw red when I heard the rumor. | |
| fed up | Annoyed because something has gone on too long. | I’m fed up with the delays. | |
| lose my temper | Get angry and show it. | I lost my temper and apologized later. | |
| put on a brave face | Act fine even when you feel bad inside. | She put on a brave face during the meeting. | |
| have mixed feelings | Two emotions at once (good and bad together). | I have mixed feelings about moving. | |
3) Upgrade your emotion words (optional variants)
| Basic | Try instead | Tone / notes | Hear |
|---|---|---|---|
| happy | content | Quiet, steady happiness (great for grown-up vibes). | |
| very happy | delighted | Polite, friendly, useful in work messages. | |
| sad | heartbroken | Strong and emotional—save it for real pain, not “no Wi-Fi.” | |
| angry | frustrated | Often means “I’m blocked by a problem,” not “I hate you.” | |
| angry | furious | High intensity. Use carefully unless you want dramatic energy. | |
| nervous | uneasy | Light worry. “Something feels off” is the vibe. | |
| very nervous | panicked | Sudden fear. Bigger than “I’m nervous,” smaller than a yak stampede. | |
| sad | down in the dumps | Friendly idiom. Common and easy for listeners to understand. | |
| very happy | over the moon | Especially common in UK English, but widely understood. | |
| angry fast | see red | Idiomatic and vivid. Not literal. Please don’t check your eyes. |
When you can name your feelings, you can handle them. Or at least describe them dramatically in perfect English. Progress is progress.





