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Felicity

Felicity is a noun describing a state of happiness or well-being, often implying intense joy or contentment. It can also refer to good fortune or pleasantness in a person, situation, or outcome. In literary and everyday use, felicity connotes a sense of flourishing and favorable circumstance.

Etymology: Felicity derives from the Latin felicitas, from felix “happy” or “fortunate.” The word entered English

In philosophy and linguistics, felicity conditions describe the prerequisites for a speech act to count as

As a given name, Felicity has been widely used in English-speaking countries since at least the 17th

In religion and myth, Felicitas is the Roman goddess of good fortune and success. In Christian hagiography,

via
Old
French
felicité
and
Latinized
forms,
becoming
common
in
Middle
English;
today
it
is
used
both
as
a
common
noun
and
as
a
female
given
name.
successful.
Proposed
by
J.
L.
Austin
and
developed
by
John
Searle,
these
conditions
concern
factors
such
as
the
speaker’s
authority,
the
truth
or
appropriateness
of
the
utterance,
the
audience’s
acceptance,
and
the
surrounding
context.
century.
Notable
people
include
Felicity
Jones,
an
English
actress,
and
Felicity
Huffman,
an
American
actress.
The
name
remains
associated
with
charm
and
grace
in
cultural
usage.
Saint
Felicity,
together
with
Saint
Perpetua,
is
commemorated
as
a
martyr
from
the
3rd
century.
The
term
also
appears
in
poetry
and
art
to
evoke
favorable
outcomes.