B1 adjective #14 mais comum 2 min de leitura

merry

Merry means feeling very happy and cheerful.

Explanation at your level:

Merry means very happy. You can use it when you are having fun. For example, you can say 'Merry Christmas' to your friends in December. It is a nice word for a good mood!

When you feel merry, you are full of joy and happiness. It is often used during holidays or parties. If you are at a fun dinner with your family, you might feel very merry.

The word merry is a slightly more descriptive way to say 'cheerful' or 'joyful'. While 'happy' is a general term, 'merry' suggests a more active, festive state of mind. It is very commonly used in traditional holiday greetings.

Using merry adds a touch of lightheartedness to your speech. It is often used in literary or traditional contexts. You might describe a group of people as a 'merry band' to suggest they are having a fun, informal time together.

In advanced English, merry carries a nuance of conviviality. It implies not just personal happiness, but a shared, outward expression of joy. It is frequently used to evoke a sense of nostalgia or traditional festivity in writing.

At the C2 level, you can appreciate the etymological warmth of merry. It bridges the gap between simple 'happiness' and the concept of 'festive mirth'. It is often used to characterize an atmosphere that is boisterous, light, and socially engaging, distinct from the more stoic 'contentment'.

Palavra em 30 segundos

  • Merry means very happy.
  • It is often used for holidays.
  • It rhymes with berry.
  • The adverb is merrily.

When you hear the word merry, think of bright smiles and a light heart. It is a wonderful, positive adjective used to describe someone who is full of cheer and good humor.

You will often see it connected to celebrations. Whether it is a birthday party or a holiday gathering, merry captures that specific feeling of being happy and wanting to share that joy with others.

The word merry has deep roots in Old English, coming from the word myrige, which meant pleasant or agreeable. It has been part of the English language for over a thousand years!

Over time, it evolved to specifically mean joyful or festive. It is related to old Germanic words that focused on the idea of being short-lived but intense pleasure. It is a classic word that has kept its warm, positive vibe throughout history.

We mostly use merry in a festive or slightly old-fashioned way. It is not a word you would use to describe a serious business meeting.

Commonly, it appears in phrases like merry Christmas or merry band of friends. It sounds warmer and more traditional than simply saying 'happy' or 'cheerful' in many contexts.

1. Make merry: To celebrate or have a party. Example: 'They decided to make merry after the project was finished.'

2. Eat, drink, and be merry: To enjoy life while you can. Example: 'We should just eat, drink, and be merry tonight!'

3. Merry-go-round: A spinning playground ride. Example: 'The kids loved the merry-go-round.'

4. The more the merrier: The more people who come, the better. Example: 'Bring your friends; the more the merrier!'

5. Merry as a cricket: To be very happy and energetic. Example: 'She was as merry as a cricket all morning.'

Merry is an adjective. Its comparative form is merrier and the superlative is merriest. Note that the 'y' changes to 'i' before adding the suffix.

In IPA, it is written as /ˈmɛri/. It rhymes with words like berry, ferry, and cherry. The stress is always on the first syllable.

Fun Fact

It used to refer to things that were pleasant in a general sense, not just happy people.

Pronunciation Guide

UK /ˈmɛri/

Short 'e' sound, clear 'r's.

US /ˈmɛri/

Similar to UK, clear 'r's.

Common Errors

  • Mixing 'e' and 'a' sounds
  • Dropping the 'r'
  • Misplacing stress

Rhymes With

berry ferry cherry perry very

Difficulty Rating

Leitura 1/5

Easy to read

Writing 2/5

Easy to use

Speaking 2/5

Easy to say

Audição 1/5

Easy to hear

What to Learn Next

Prerequisites

happy fun joy

Learn Next

festive convivial jovial

Avançado

mirthful ebullient

Grammar to Know

Adjective formation

Merry -> Merrier

Comparative adjectives

Merrier than

Adverb formation

Merrily

Examples by Level

1

Merry Christmas to you!

Happy holiday

Greeting

2

They are very merry.

They are happy

Adjective usage

3

It is a merry day.

A happy day

Simple sentence

4

We are merry.

We are happy

Subject-verb

5

A merry song.

A happy song

Noun phrase

6

Be merry today!

Be happy

Imperative

7

The dog is merry.

The dog is happy

Subject-verb

8

Merry friends laugh.

Happy friends

Adjective-noun

1

The children were merry at the party.

2

She has a merry smile.

3

We had a merry time at the beach.

4

The music was merry.

5

He felt merry after the good news.

6

Everyone was in a merry mood.

7

It was a merry celebration.

8

They sang a merry tune.

1

The villagers made merry all night long.

2

She gave a merry laugh at his joke.

3

The more the merrier, so bring everyone!

4

He was feeling quite merry after the dinner.

5

The holiday season makes everyone feel merry.

6

They are a merry group of colleagues.

7

The story had a merry ending.

8

The children danced with merry abandon.

1

The tavern was filled with merry travelers.

2

She maintained a merry disposition despite the rain.

3

The festive lights added to the merry atmosphere.

4

He led a merry chase through the woods.

5

The play was a merry comedy of errors.

6

They spent the evening in merry conversation.

7

A merry twinkle appeared in his eye.

8

The village festival was a truly merry affair.

1

The revelers were in a particularly merry state.

2

His merry demeanor masked a deeper intelligence.

3

The poem captures the merry essence of spring.

4

They engaged in a merry debate over dinner.

5

The atmosphere was light and merry.

6

She recounted the tale with a merry glint in her eye.

7

The book is a merry romp through history.

8

The team was in a merry mood after their victory.

1

The prose is characterized by a merry, whimsical quality.

2

He was known for his merry, if somewhat chaotic, wit.

3

The gathering was a merry confluence of old friends.

4

The painting depicts a merry scene of rustic life.

5

Her merry laughter echoed through the hall.

6

It was a merry, albeit brief, respite from work.

7

The music had a merry, infectious rhythm.

8

The historical account describes a merry courtly gathering.

Colocações comuns

Merry Christmas
merry mood
merry laugh
merry band
make merry
merry tune
merry chase
merry season
merry twinkle
merry gathering

Idioms & Expressions

"The more the merrier"

More people make it better

Come along, the more the merrier!

casual

"Make merry"

Celebrate or party

They made merry all night.

literary

"Eat, drink, and be merry"

Enjoy life now

We should eat, drink, and be merry.

casual

"Merry-go-round"

Spinning ride

The kids rode the merry-go-round.

neutral

"Merry as a cricket"

Very happy

She was as merry as a cricket.

casual

"Lead someone a merry chase"

Make someone work hard to find/catch you

The cat led the dog a merry chase.

casual

Easily Confused

merry vs marry

similar sound

marry means to wed, merry means happy

They will marry; they are merry.

merry vs berry

rhymes

berry is a fruit

A merry person eats a berry.

merry vs ferry

rhymes

ferry is a boat

The ferry is merry.

merry vs airy

similar sound

airy means light/breezy

The airy room is merry.

Sentence Patterns

A1

Subject + is + merry

She is merry.

A2

A + merry + noun

A merry party.

B1

Make + merry

We like to make merry.

A2

Feel + merry

I feel merry today.

B2

Merry + as + a + noun

Merry as a cricket.

Família de palavras

Nouns

mirth amusement, especially as expressed in laughter

Verbs

merry rarely used as a verb, usually 'make merry'

Adjectives

merry cheerful

Relacionado

mirthful adjective form of mirth

How to Use It

frequency

7

Formality Scale

literary neutral casual

Erros comuns

Using 'merry' for any type of happiness Use 'happy' or 'glad'
Merry implies a festive, external joy.
Merrying Merrier/Merriest
Merry is an adjective, not a verb.
Confusing with 'marry' Marry (to wed)
Different spelling and meaning.
Using 'merry' in serious contexts Use 'content' or 'satisfied'
Merry is too light for serious topics.
Saying 'very merry' when 'jolly' is better Use 'jolly' for people
Merry is more for situations/times.

Tips

💡

Memory Palace

Imagine a Christmas tree in your hallway.

💡

Native Usage

Mostly used in holiday greetings.

🌍

Cultural Insight

Associated with traditional British Christmas.

💡

Grammar Shortcut

Adjective + noun.

💡

Say It Right

Rhymes with berry.

💡

Don't Mistake

Don't confuse with marry.

💡

Did You Know?

Related to Old English 'myrige'.

💡

Study Smart

Use it in a greeting card.

💡

Writing Tip

Use it to describe atmosphere.

💡

Speaking Tip

Use it with a smile.

Memorize It

Mnemonic

M-E-R-R-Y: Many Everyone Really Radiating Yippee!

Visual Association

A bright red Christmas ornament.

Word Web

joy festive party laughter holiday

Desafio

Use 'merry' in a sentence today.

Origem da palavra

Old English

Original meaning: pleasant, agreeable

Contexto cultural

None, generally a very positive word.

Strongly tied to Christmas traditions and classic literature.

Merry Christmas (greeting) Merry Men (Robin Hood) Merry-go-round

Practice in Real Life

Real-World Contexts

holidays

  • Merry Christmas
  • Merry season
  • Holiday cheer

parties

  • Make merry
  • Merry gathering
  • Merry mood

literature

  • Merry band
  • Merry chase
  • Merry tale

daily life

  • Merry laugh
  • Merry smile
  • Feeling merry

Conversation Starters

"What makes you feel merry?"

"Do you like the holiday season?"

"How do you make merry with friends?"

"What is the merriest thing you did recently?"

"Do you know any merry songs?"

Journal Prompts

Describe a time you felt merry.

Write about a merry party you attended.

What does 'merry' mean to you?

Create a story about a merry group of friends.

Perguntas frequentes

8 perguntas

Yes, but merry is more festive.

No, it is inappropriate.

Merry is an adjective, it has no past tense.

Merrily.

It is traditional and slightly warm.

Yes, it is common.

Historically yes, but rarely now.

Only in holiday greetings.

Teste-se

fill blank A1

We are very ___ today.

Correto! Quase. Resposta certa: merry

Merry means happy.

multiple choice A2

Which means happy?

Correto! Quase. Resposta certa: merry

Merry is a synonym for happy.

true false B1

Merry is a synonym for sad.

Correto! Quase. Resposta certa: Falso

Merry means happy.

match pairs B1

Word

Significado

All matched!

Matching synonyms.

sentence order B2

Toque nas palavras abaixo para montar a frase
Correto! Quase. Resposta certa:

We had a merry time.

Pontuação: /5

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