excitación
excitement
Origin: Latin 'excitatio' (a rousing), from 'excitare' (to rouse).
Also means
excitation
Usage Note
Excitación covers both emotional excitement and the scientific/physical sense of excitation (e.g. atomic or neural excitation). In everyday speech it means eager anticipation or agitation; in a medical or physics context it refers to a state of heightened energy. The verb is excitar, and the adjective excitado/a can mean excited but also, in informal registers, sexually aroused — context matters. The plural excitaciones drops the accent: stress is naturally penultimate.
Examples
"Los niños no podían ocultar su excitación."
Natural Translation
The children could not hide their excitement.
Related Words
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