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Hopefulness   /hˈoʊpfəlnɪs/   Listen
Hopefulness

noun
1.
Full of hope.
2.
The feeling you have when you have hope.  Antonym: hopelessness.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Hopefulness" Quotes from Famous Books



... of opposition again, he turned to Lord Maitland and said, "Lord Maitland, if you want to be in office, if you have any ambition or wish to be successful in life, shake us off, give us up." But Smith intervened, and with singular hopefulness ventured to prophesy that in two years things would certainly come round again. "Why," replied Burke, "I have already been in a minority nineteen years, and your two years, Mr. Smith, will just make me twenty-one, and it will surely be high time for me to be ...
— Life of Adam Smith • John Rae

... satisfaction, the boy closed his eyes, utterly exhausted, and lay breathing steadily and well, while Pen stood leaning over him waiting till he felt sure that the boy was asleep; and then, as he laid his hand lightly upon his patient's brow, a sense of hopefulness came over him on feeling that ...
— !Tention - A Story of Boy-Life during the Peninsular War • George Manville Fenn

... hopefulness had come back to her in the presence of her brother's dejection, as a woman always forgets her own sorrow when some one she loves is grieving. But she could not communicate any of her feeling to Joe, who had been and seen and ...
— The Sport of the Gods • Paul Laurence Dunbar

... Sanguine Scot had been thinking rapidly, and with characteristic hopefulness, felt he had the bull by the horns. "We'll just have to block her, chaps; that's all," he said. "A wire or two should do it"; and, inviting the Dandy "to come and lend a hand," led the way to the telegraph office; and presently there quivered into ...
— We of the Never-Never • Jeanie "Mrs. Aeneas" Gunn

... every discomfort and disappointment of the German people is being sedulously diverted into rage against the Allies, and particularly against the English. This is all very well as long as the war goes on with a certain effect of hopefulness. But what when presently the beam has so tilted against Germany that an unprofitable peace has become urgent and inevitable? How can the Hohenzollern suddenly abandon his pose of righteous indignation and make friends with the accursed enemy, and how can he make any peace at all with ...
— What is Coming? • H. G. Wells


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