Perhaps you are describing euphoria.
Euphoria
Tall tales use an exaggerated story with realistic details.
No, it is an adverb. (Generally, words that end in -ly tend to be adverbs, although there are always exceptions.) "Unusually" means something that is not normally seen, and the word describes a verb or an adjective: My computer is running unusually slow tonight.
true
Yes
A palooza is an exaggerated event.
Euphoria is the medical term meaning exaggerated feeling of well-being.
It means generically feeling of wellbeing
A preparation intended to improve and strengthen the functions of the body and increase a feeling of wellbeing
health and wellbeing means if you are phsically feeling well and mentally and socially
euphoria: a feeling of happiness, confidence, or well-being sometimes exaggerated in pathological states as mania.
No, feeling blue is an idiom that means feeling sad or melancholic. It is not a hyperbole, which is an exaggerated statement not meant to be taken literally.
A feeling of uncontrollable anxiety when you think about or are exposed to the sun The feeling that you must do everything possible to avoid the sun The inability to function normally because of your anxiety Often, the knowledge that your fears are unreasonable or exaggerated but feeling powerless to control them
Machismo is an exaggerated sense of masculinity. An example sentence would be: It was very obvious that he was feeling very machismo.
Wellbeing of Women was created in 1964.
a feeling of happiness, confidence, or well-being sometimes exaggerated in pathological states as mania
You seem to be unusually sensitive today. The valley is unusually smoggy today.
She ran the race unusually quickly. The dance was unusually crowded. The area of the sunburn was unusually large. Angie's fingernails were unusually tiny.