Glee

Noun

 * 1)  Joy; merriment; mirth; gaiety; particularly, the mirth enjoyed at a feast.
 * 2)  Music; minstrelsy; entertainment.
 * 3)  An unaccompanied part song for three or more solo voices.  It is not necessarily gleesome.

Adjectives for Glee
rapturous; malicious; unconscious; strange; noisy; defying; childish; uncouth; unbidden; counterfeited;  fiendish;  sparkling; tumultuous; pelting; innocent; laughing; intemperate; venturous; chortling.

Verbs for Glee
advance with—; bubble with—; condemn—; dance in—; display—; exhibit—; exude—; feign—; flaunt—; grin with—; increase—; jump in—; laugh with—; leap in—; occa¬sion—; plunge into with—; rub the hands in—; sport with—; titter in—; turn into—; —envelops; —infects; —spreads.

Thesaurus
Schadenfreude, amusement, beatification, beatitude, bewitchment, blessedness, bliss, blissfulness, blitheness, cantata, cheer, cheerfulness, choral singing, chorus, cloud nine, delectation, delight, ecstasy, ecstatics, elation, enchantment, enjoyment, exaltation, exhilaration, exuberance, exultation, felicity, frivolity, fun, gaiety, gladness, gleefulness, good spirits, happiness, heaven, high glee, high spirits, hilariousness, hilarity, intoxication, jocularity, jocundity, jolliness, jollity, joviality, joy, joyance, joyfulness, joyousness, jubilation, laughter, levity, madrigal, madrigaletto, merriment, merriness, mirth, mirthfulness, oratorio, overhappiness, overjoyfulness, paradise, pleasure, rapture, ravishment, satisfaction, seventh heaven, sunshine, transport, unalloyed happiness, unison

Etymology
gle from gleo:, akin to  glý:. A poetic word in, the word was obsolete by 1500, but revived late 18c.

Translations

 * Arabic: بهجة
 * Catalan: alegria, joia
 * Dutch:
 * Finnish: ,
 * French: joie
 * German:, Fröhlichkeit


 * Italian:
 * Norwegian:
 * Persian:
 * Portuguese: alegria
 * Spanish:
 * Swedish: glädje, fröjd, munterhet


 * Portuguese: música, canção

Anagrams

 * lege

Noun

 * 1) something that is wet because of it has been pasted together

Inflection

 * Dative and accusative are nowadays obsolete, use nominative instead.