Need another word that means the same as “sunny”? Find 26 synonyms and 30 related words for “sunny” in this overview.
The synonyms of “Sunny” are: cheery, gay, bright, sunlit, brilliant, clear, fine, fair, cheerful, happy, light-hearted, glad, merry, joyful, bubbly, blithe, jolly, jovial, animated, buoyant, ebullient, upbeat, vivacious, sparky, perky, rosy
According to the Oxford Dictionary of English, “sunny” as an adjective can have the following definitions:
animated | Made to appear to move as living creatures do. An animated conversation. |
blithe | Carefree and happy and lighthearted. Spoke with blithe ignorance of the true situation. |
bright | Not made dim or less bright. All the world seems bright and gay. |
brilliant | Exceptionally clever or talented. He was quite brilliant and was promoted almost at once. |
bubbly | Full of or showing high spirits. A bright and bubbly personality. |
buoyant | Able or tending to keep afloat or rise to the top of a liquid or gas. Buoyant balsawood boats. |
cheerful | Noticeably happy and optimistic. A cheerful voice. |
cheery | Happy and optimistic. A cheery smile. |
clear | Clear and distinct to the senses easily perceptible. It was clear that they were in a trap. |
ebullient | Joyously unrestrained. She sounded ebullient and happy. |
fair | Having few alterations or corrections. A fair complexion. |
fine | Characterized by elegance or refinement or accomplishment. The fine hand of a master. |
glad | Eagerly disposed to act or to be of service. He will be glad to carry your bags. |
happy | Eagerly disposed to act or to be of service. Happy Christmas. |
jolly | Lively and entertaining. The jolly crowd at the reunion. |
jovial | Cheerful and friendly. She was in a jovial mood. |
joyful | Feeling, expressing, or causing great pleasure and happiness. Make a joyful noise. |
light-hearted | Carefree and happy and lighthearted. |
merry | Slightly and good-humouredly drunk. The streets were dense with merry throngs of students. |
perky | Cheerful and lively. Don t be perky miss. |
rosy | Promising or suggesting good fortune or happiness; hopeful. The memory had the power to make her cheeks turn rosy. |
sparky | Lively and high-spirited. Her sparky personality. |
sunlit | Illuminated by direct light from the sun. The sunlit slopes of the canyon. |
upbeat | Pleasantly (even unrealistically) optimistic. He was upbeat about the company s future. |
vivacious | Attractively lively and animated (typically used of a woman. Her vivacious and elegant mother. |
afternoon | In the afternoon every afternoon. She worked on Tuesday afternoons. |
auroral | Characteristic of the dawn. A dim auroral glow. |
breakfast | Eat breakfast. We breakfast at seven. |
bright | Brightly. A choice of colours from pastels through to brights. |
dawn | Become evident to the mind; be perceived or understood. The awful truth was beginning to dawn on him. |
day | The part of a day when it is light the time between sunrise and sunset. They only met a few days ago. |
daybreak | The first light of day. She set off at daybreak. |
daylight | The natural light of the day. There were two hours of daylight left. |
daytime | The time after sunrise and before sunset while it is light outside. A daytime telephone number. |
glow | Emit a steady even light without flames. With a glow of pride Mildred walked away. |
hour | A time of day specified as an exact number of hours from midnight or midday. We live an hour from the airport. |
illuminant | Something that can serve as a source of light. Until 1880 oil was the only illuminant in use. |
lunch | Eat lunch. At what time are you lunching. |
lunchtime | The customary or habitual hour for eating lunch. He observed a regular lunchtime. |
midday | The middle of the day. The midday sun. |
midnight | Twelve o’clock at night. The midnight hours. |
moon | Any object resembling a moon. Jupiter has sixteen moons. |
morning | Every morning. I ve got a meeting this morning. |
noon | Twelve o’clock in the day; midday. The service starts at twelve noon. |
o'clock | According to the clock. |
solstice | The time or date (twice each year) at which the sun reaches its maximum or minimum declination, marked by the longest and shortest days (about 21 June and 22 December). |
summer | Spend the summer in a particular place. This plant flowers in late summer. |
sun | The rays of the sun. After going so many suns without food I was sleeping. |
sunday | United States evangelist (1862-1935. |
sunlight | The rays of the sun. A shaft of sunlight. |
sunrise | The time in the morning when the sun appears or full daylight arrives. A spectacular sunrise over the summit of the mountain. |
sunshine | Used as a friendly or sometimes threatening form of address. Hand it over sunshine. |
tonight | The evening or night of the present day. Are you doing anything tonight. |
wednesday | The fourth day of the week; the third working day. |
weekday | Any day except Sunday (and sometimes except Saturday. The weekday rush hour. |
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