Joy: Wikis

  
  
  

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Updated live from Wikipedia, last check: June 03, 2012 06:00 UTC (50 seconds ago)

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Contents

Joy may refer to:

Music

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Literature

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Source material

Up to date as of January 22, 2010

From Wikisource

Joy
disambiguation
This is a disambiguation page, which lists works which share the same title. If an article link referred you here, please consider editing it to point directly to the intended page.


Joy may refer to:


Wiktionary

Up to date as of January 14, 2010

Definition from Wiktionary, a free dictionary

See also joy

Contents

English

Etymology

From the noun joy, first used by Puritans in the 17th century.

Pronunciation

  • enPR: joi, IPA: /dʒɔɪ/, SAMPA: /dZOI/

Proper noun

Singular
Joy

Plural
-

Joy

  1. A female given name.
    • 1789, William Blake, Infant Joy:
      "I have no name: / I am but two days old." / What shall I call thee? / "I happy am, / Joy is my name." / Sweet joy befall thee!
    • 1857, Dinah Craik, John Halifax, Gentleman, Chapter XXI:
      She was named Muriel — after the rather peculiar name of John's mother. Her own mother would have it so; only wishing out of her full heart, happy one! that there should be a slight alteration made in the second name. Therefore the baby was called Muriel Joy — Muriel Joy Halifax.

Translations


Bible wiki

Up to date as of January 23, 2010

From BibleWiki

The feeling of gladness and rejoicing.

—Biblical Data:

Cant. R. i. 4 enumerates ten different terms for joy, and Wünsche ("Die Freude in den Schriften des Alten Bundes," 1896) states that no language possesses as many words for joy as does the Hebrew; which fact indicates the cheerful disposition of the Jewish people and the optimism predominant in Judaism (see Optimism). Often the Hebrew poet or prophet transfers the joy of his soul to the surrounding creation; and so heaven and earth, mountains and valleys, fields and trees, are pictured as breaking forth into joy (Ps 9611f, Ps 971, Ps 984; Isa 35:1f, Isa 44:23, Isa 49:13).

The Bible couples joy with the earnestness of life, in striking contrast to paganism, which at times encourages wanton indulgence in sensual pleasures by rendering wild orgies of passion features of the worship of its lustful deities, and at other times turns to the opposite extreme of absolute world-contempt and avoidance of every healthful enjoyment ("Rejoice not, O Israel, in the joy of the heathen nations"; Hosea ix. 1, Hebr.; see Gentile; Worship, Idol). The Bible cautions against pleasures which cause heaviness, sorrow, and want (Prov. xiv. 13, xv. 21, xxi. 15; Eccl. ii. 2, vii. 4); but it regards lawful and healthful enjoyments as commendable inasmuch as they are blessings from God (Deut. xii. 7, xxiv. 11; Prov. x. 18; Eccl. ix. 7, xi. 9). To some extent, rejoicing with or before God, the Dispenser of all good, becomes an obligation (Deut. xii. 12, 18; xvi. 11, 15; xxvi. 11; xxvii. 7). Pure joy is the joy of thanksgiving to God, or the joy in God and in His help (Lev. xxiii. 40; Isa. xix. 19, xxv. 9; Joel ii. 23; Ps. vii. 12, ix. 3, civ. 34; I Sam. ii. 1). God Himself is a God of joy, who rejoices in His works (Ps. civ. 31). So do His statutes rejoice the heart (ib. xix. 9 [A. V. 8]). "In uprightness of heart there is gladness, wherefore the righteous will rejoice" (ib. xcvii. 11-12, Hebr.). "It is joy to the just to do judgment" (Prov. xxi. 15). "The key-note of the old Hebrew cult was joy, because it was a communion of man with his God" (Smend, "Religionsgesch." p. 125, Freiburg, 1893). Fulness of joy is promised for the soul when in the presence of God (Ps. xvi. 11). Moreover, the Law consecrated joy, for it was destined to impart joy to those deprived of joy by poverty and privation. The festivals of thanksgiving were ordained to be occasions of beneficence to the homeless and fatherless (Deut. xvi. 9-11). The worship of God should be offered in joy (Ps. c. 2); and the house of prayer should be joyful (Isa. lvi. 7). An enemy's fall should not cause joy (Prov. xxiv. 17).

—In Rabbinical Literature:

The same spirit of joyfulness, moderated by the consciousness of duty, pervades rabbinical literature. "Simḥah shel miẓwah" (= "joy emanating from sacred duty well performed") is regarded as the only state of the soul in which the Shekinah rests on man (Shab. 30b), and in which communion with God by means of prayer should be sought (Ber. 31a). This joy the Rabbis find commended in Eccl. viii. 15, and the profane form repudiated in Eccl. ii. 2 (Shab. l.c.). To cheer the depressed is a meritorious act which may obtain for the lowliest man a share in the world to come (Ta'an. 22a).

Against the ascetic view of the Essenes, Rab declared that man at the Judgment Day will have to give account for every lawful enjoyment offered to him by Providence and refused by him (Yer. Ḳid. iv. to end). Both he and Samuel quoted sayings even of a somewhat hedonistic character in order to discourage the spirit of ascetic world-contempt ('Er. 54a). In a similar sense must be taken the saying of R. Eleazar, "He who lives without a wife lives without joy" (Yeb. 63a), and that of Eliezer ha-Ḳappar, "He who denies himself wine is a sinner" (Ta'an. 11a). But the Rabbis made joy, above all, the characteristic feature of the Sabbath and of the holy seasons of the year. The words "call the Sabbath a delight" (Isa. lviii. 13) were so interpreted as to render the Sabbath the gem of days and the joy of the Jewish home (Shab. 118a, b; See Sabbath); and similarly every festival was invested with the character of joy (Pes. 109a; Meg. 16b). Even the Days of Penitence should have not an austere character like the Lenten days of the Christians but preeminently one of cheerfulness (Yer. R. H. i. 57b).

But more powerful than all rabbinical precepts as an incentive to joy was life itself. In spite of the gloom cast upon the Jew ever since the destruction of the Temple (Ber. 31a; 'Ab. Zarah 3b), in spite of all the persecutions and oppressions endured by him, there is a wondrous outburst of joy noticeable in the Jewish liturgy, in every morning and evening prayer (see Ge'ullah), in the prayers for Sabbath and holy days, and in the songs and benedictions recited at the table. Cheerfulness is the key-note of the Jew's character in his domestic life and in his religious devotion, because it is founded upon optimism, upon faith in God, and upon hope in the final triumph of justice and truth.

Bibliography: Guttmacher, Optimism and Pessimism, pp. 61-64, Baltimore, 1903; Hamburger, R. B. T. s.v. Freude; Wünsche, Die Freude in den Schriften des Alten Bundes, Weimar, 1896.

This entry includes text from the Jewish Encyclopedia, 1906.
Facts about JoyRDF feed

Simple English

Simple English Wiktionary has the word meaning for:

Contents

Joy is an emotion of great happiness. Joy can also be interpreted as a person's name.

Joy may also refer to:

Joy as a surname

  • Alfred Harrison Joy, American astronomer (d. 1973)
  • Bernard Joy, English footballer (d.1984)
  • Bill Joy, Computer Pioneer (William Joy)
  • Brian Joy, a former English footballer
  • C. Turner Joy, an admiral of the United States Navy (d. 1956)
  • Charles Frederick Joy, U.S. politician from Missouri (d. 1921)
  • George William Joy, an Irish illustrator (d.1925)
  • Greg Joy, a Canadian Olympic athlete
  • Henry Bourne Joy, automobile businessman (d. 1936)
  • Ian Joy, an American soccer player
  • Joseph Francis Joy, American inventor and founder of Joy Mining Machinery (d.1957)
  • Leatrice Joy, an American silent film actress (d. 1985)
  • Mary E. Joy, a British author and journalist (d. 1898)
  • Mike Joy, a TV sports announcer currently with NASCAR and FOX Sports
  • Norman H. Joy, British coleopterist noted for his work Practical Handbook of British Beetles (d. 1953)
  • Prosenjit Joy, a cricketer from Bangladesh
  • Rick Joy, an American architect
  • Robert Joy, Canadian character actor

Joy as a given name

  • Joy Behar, American comedian, TV host of The View, and actress
  • Joy Davidman, American writer and wife of C. S. Lewis (d. 1960)
  • Joy Destiny Tobing, winner of the first Indonesian Idol
  • Joy Enriquez, American singer who had success in the early 2000s
  • Joy Fawcett, an American soccer player
  • Joy Garnett, a New York artist
  • Joy Giovanni, WWE diva
  • Joy Grieveson (Elizabeth Grieveson), British track and field athlete
  • Joy Harjo, an American poet
  • Joy Kogawa, a Canadian poet and novelist
  • Joy Lauren, an American actress
  • Joy Mustafi, Computer Scientist, India, Indian Statistical Institute
  • Joy Ogwu, a Nigerian foreign minister
  • Joy Padgett, a Republican member of the Ohio Senate
  • Joy Quigley, a New Zealand politician
  • Joy Smith, a Canadian politician
  • Joy Turner, a fictional character on the US sitcom My Name is Earl, played by Jaime Pressly
  • Joy Williams, Christian singer
  • Judy-Joy Davies, an Australian backstroke swimmer of the 1940s
  • Joy Chang, a student
  • Joy Serg, "Embargo" guild member

Literature

  • Joy (novel), a 1990 novel by Marsha Hunt
  • Joy (novels), series of erotic novels by Joy Laurey
  • "Ode to Joy" ("An die Freude" in German), an ode written in 1785 by the German poet and historian Friedrich Schiller
  • Surprised by Joy, an autobiographical work by C. S. Lewis
  • The Joy of Sex, an illustrated sex manual by Alex Comfort, M.D., Ph.D.

Music

  • The fourth and final movement of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, also called "Ode to Joy"; inspired by the poem of Schiller
  • Joy to the World (disambiguation), the title of a Christmas carol and several other songs
  • Joy (album), the final album by The Skids
  • Joy (EP), a three-song EP by American punk band the Minutemen
  • Joy (The Stalin), the first album by Japanese punk rock band The Stalin
  • Joy (Avalon album), a holiday album by Avalon
  • Joy (Paul King album), the one solo album by Paul King
  • "Joy", a single by experimental group Psychic TV
  • Joy and Joy, a single and album by Japanese singer Yuki Isoya
  • "Joy", a song by Against Me! from their album Searching for a Former Clarity
  • "Joy", a song by Lucinda Williams on her album Car Wheels on a Gravel Road
  • "Joy", a song by François Feldman on his album Indigo
  • "Joy", a song by VNV Nation on their album Praise the Fallen
  • "Joy", a song by Mick Jagger on his album Goddess in the Doorway
  • "A Joy", a song by Four Tet on his album Everything Ecstatic
  • "Joy", an Italo Disco Austrian band, well known for their hit Touch By Touch (1985)
  • Joy Division, a band from the United Kingdom
  • Joy Electric, a one-man electropop/synth pop/Christian group consisting of Ronnie Martin
  • Joy Records, a record label

Joy as place name

  • Joy, Illinois, a village in the United States
  • Joys Green, a village in Gloucestershire, England
  • Joy Range, a mountain range on Axel Heiberg Island, Nunavut, Canada
  • Port La-Joye / Fort Amherst, French for "Port of Joy", located in central Prince Edward Island, Canada
  • Several places called Mount Joy

Miscellaneous

  • Joy Buzzer, a practical joke device
  • Joy (programming language), a concatenative functional language
  • Joy Melbourne, a radio station in Melbourne, Australia
  • Joy dishwashing liquid, a brand name of detergent products produced by Procter & Gamble
  • The Joy of Painting, a television program hosted by Bob Ross
  • Joystick, a computer game control device
  • Nurse Joy, a set of similar looking characters from the fictional Pokémon franchise that operate the Pokémon Centers.
  • USS Daniel A Joy (DE 585), a rudderow class destroyer
  • USS Turner Joy (DD-951), a US Navy destroyer named after C. Turner Joy (above)







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