festivity
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++fes·tiv·i·ty /feˈstɪvəti/ noun 1 festivities [plural]CELEBRATE things such as drinking, eating, or dancing that are done to celebrate a special occasion 庆祝活动,庆典 The festivities started with a procession through the town. 庆祝活动以全城巡游开场。2 CELEBRATE[uncountable] a happy feeling that exists when people celebrate something 欢乐,欢庆 There was an air of festivity in the village. 村里一片欢庆气氛。
Examples from the Corpus
festivity• Carnivals are about excitement and festivity.• In April, a four-day break, including Sevillian Easter festivities costs from £667.• These happy festivities still occasionally take place.• And she may not show up for the swearing-in and other inaugural festivities the following day.• Are you prepared for all the festivities?• At present, however, the festivities seem light years away, having been eclipsed by a fiscal crisis of mammoth proportions.• The Christmas tree has been part of the festivities in Britain since the last century.• The festivities on stage are punctuated by periodic announcements of prizes.• It would be a remarkable party, and already our apartment was acquiring a quality of exaggerated and unrestrained festivity.fes·tiv·i·ty nounChineseSyllable
or drinking, as things Corpus are such eating, dancing that
festivity
fes‧tiv‧i‧ty /feˈstɪvəti, feˈstɪvɪti/
noun
1. festivities [plural] things such as drinking, eating, or dancing that are done to celebrate a special occasion:
The festivities started with a procession through the town.
2. [uncountable] a happy feeling that exists when people celebrate something:
There was an air of festivity in the village.
fes‧tiv‧i‧ty /feˈstɪvəti, feˈstɪvɪti/
noun1. festivities [plural] things such as drinking, eating, or dancing that are done to celebrate a special occasion:
2. [uncountable] a happy feeling that exists when people celebrate something: