Friendship, is where people have a bond of joy and will come together and have fun
Fear, opposite courage (having courage in the face of fear)
Shame, opposite confidence (shame: how one feels about one's past bad actions or thoughts; shamelessness: one does not feel shame, but others think one should)
Kindness (benevolence), opposite cruelty (kindness: when people are good to other people)
Indignation (feeling angry because something is not fair, such as undeserved bad fortune)
Envy, jealousy (pain when people have something that one wishes for oneself)
Love, a strong emotion of attachment one feels for someone else. Ranges to family, pets, friends, significant others or fictional characters
Wonder, is an emotion comparable to surprise that people feel when perceiving something rare or unexpected. It has historically been seen as an important aspect of human nature
Charles Darwin's The Expressions of the Emotions in Man and Animals was a landmark work which is still used as a source.[3] The following list is taken from the chapter-headings in the book.
The book is famous as being the first scientific book which used photographs as a major part of the evidence. Emotions, Darwin decided, were behavioural traits which evolved. He pointed out how the human face is adapted to show many of these emotions: it has muscles for facial movements which are not possible in other mammals. On the other hand, other mammals do have ways of showing many of these emotions.
Ekman has taken this idea a step further by studying the way people try to hide their emotions. He filmed the tell-tale glimpses of brief moments when true emotion is shown on a person's face.[4]
An academic study[5] using self-reporting of subjects distinguished 27 discrete emotions named as in the following list: