Eureka [noun]

Definition of Eureka:

something amazing; state of amazement

Opposite/Antonyms of Eureka:


Sentence/Example of Eureka:

We experience night, he speculated in his prose poem Eureka in 1848, because the universe is not eternal.

In the Eureka area in northern California, a company managed by Rechnitz in 2011 leased five nursing homes, agreeing to pay the property owner a total of $3 million in rent per year, state records show.

Johnson said Rechnitz took over the Eureka properties from an owner facing a large civil judgment and the lease structure required millions of dollars to be set aside for a security deposit and capital expenses.

In one example, at the carmaker Porsche, an engineer had a Eureka moment while getting coffee from an automated machine.

"We ought to have called him and Dorothy when we were first attacked," added Eureka.

"Eureka sees better in the dark than we can," whispered Dorothy.

They mounted into the buggy, Dorothy holding Eureka safe in her lap.

Dorothy held Eureka in her arms and bade her friends a fond good-bye.

You owe the Eureka, as your share of the assessment, two dollars and forty cents.

And Fanny stole back to her desk, put the hateful book resolutely before her, pressed both hands tightly on her temples,—Eureka!