Definitionn. the feeling that things will turn out badly
Last update: October 31, 2016
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There is general pessimism in the company about future job prospects. [noun]
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He delights that Charles finds his pessimism so corrosive of his own hopes. [noun]
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The contrast between deep pessimism and facile optimism which we pointed to throughout much of the 1980s is still there. [noun]
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His resignation is at times almost Oriental in its fatalism, and occasionally it suggests Schopenhauer in its mixture of fate and pessimism. [noun]
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He is, therefore, hardly a realist, but rather a man blinded by pessimism; and his novels, though generally powerful and sometimes fascinating, are not pleasant or wholesome reading. [noun]
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That which follows speaks of age and sadness; even its brightest hours are followed by gloom, and by the pessimism inseparable from the passing of old standards. [noun]
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, has inevitably detached the lurking spirit of pessimism. [Please select]
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"Invalid's pessimism," was my private comment. [Please select]
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Pessimism suggests a third objection. [Please select]
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Indignation is the privilege of the Chandala; so is pessimism. [Please select]
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There is, for those who care to see, a deep and growing unrest and pessimism. [Please select]
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