Schadenfreude: [sha-dan-froi-da}
Part of speech: noun
Origin: German
1. Pleasure taken
from the misfortune of others
2. A desire to see
others suffer
Examples used in a sentence:
1. I experienced schadenfreude
after hearing that my horrible manager had been fired.
2, Sarah couldn’t
help but feel a bit of schadenfreude when she discovered that the man
who’d stolen her car was now in prison.
About Schadenfreude
It’s no surprise that the word schadenfreude is a gift from
the German language – it’s a literal combination of the German words for “harm
or misfortune” and “joy.”
Did You Know?
Schadenfreude comes to us from German, where it is
capitalized. However, that’s not
required hen it’s used in English.
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