v.
To do something that is both stimulating and relaxing. [thrill + relax]
—thrillaxing pp.
—thrillaxation n.
Example Citations:
Tim Locke, head of marketing at Mark Warner, said there was a "growing trend for people wanting to combine fitness and well-being on holiday", which he put down to the Olympics...PR wags have even had coined the term "thrillax" to describe the trend.
—Josie Gurney-Read, " Olympic Games inspires interest in active holidays: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/travelnews/9461661/Olympic-Games-inspires-interest-in-active-holidays.html," The Daily Telegraph, Aug 8, 2012
Our new favourite word is "thrillax" so be warned, it's one that we expect to be somewhat overused in the short term on this blog!...To us thrillaxing is what more people should be doing with their free time — getting together with groups of friends, making your heart race with a mixture of exertion and fear then laughing together when the fear subsides and you reach the target.
—" Thrillax Yorkshire: http://rocksteadyadventure.co.uk/blog/tag/thrillax/," Rock Steady Adventure, April 18, 2012
Earliest Citation:
Yeah, freeriding is awesome. It's "thrillaxing", like skiing smoothly down a broad, intermediate slope.
—James Douglass, " Windsurfing Mag Board Tests — 'Light Air!?': http://jimbodouglass.blogspot.ca/2009/01/windsurfing-mag-board-tests-light-air.html," James' Blog, January 14, 2009
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New words. 2013.