: a brief moment of emotional excitement : shudder, thrill
produce a genuine frisson of disquiet—Patricia Craig
a frisson of surprise
a frisson of delight
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Frisson and Shiver
A chill down one’s spine isn’t always a sensation of fear or suspense. As Daniel Marenco writes, “What is most exciting about literature is how much it surprises us and makes us fall in love. Poetry especially has this gift, the gift of provoking in us a frisson, a shiver, this capacity, like a bee, to put honey on the tip of our tongue, provoking that pleasant sensation of feeling and perceiving.” His relating of frisson and shiver is apt given that frisson comes from the French word for “shiver.” (Those familiar with shivering will note that it’s also apt that frisson traces back to ultimately to Late Latin frīgēre “to be cold” or frīgēscere “to become cold.”) A frisson can be compared to a thrill or a rush, as it refers to a brief moment of emotional excitement, as in “a frisson of surprise.”
those two are still caught up in the giddy frisson of a new romance
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His aim is to use their technical mastery to bring a frisson of daring back to British fashion.—Hayley Maitland, Vogue, 16 Dec. 2024 Yet, effective leaders also better understand workplace frissons and frictions, how to motivate and resolve conflict and, above all, how to deal with people.—Robert Logemann, Forbes, 13 Dec. 2024 There’s a frisson between the two from their earliest scenes together.—Madeline Leung Coleman, Vulture, 21 Oct. 2024 Certainly there is beauty and awe to fill anyone’s soul, but does a chill draft blow through there as well, leeching ice into the spirit and sending a frisson of tingles down one’s spine?—Phil Plait, Scientific American, 25 Oct. 2024 See all Example Sentences for frisson
Word History
Etymology
French, shiver, from Old French friçon, from Late Latin friction-, frictio, from Latin, literally, friction (taken in Late Latin as derivative of frigēre to be cold)
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