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Hopefulness   /hˈoʊpfəlnɪs/   Listen
Hopefulness

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






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Hopefulness" Quotes from Famous Books



... I possessed your hopefulness, my young friend," answered Mr Hastings, with a look ...
— Won from the Waves • W.H.G. Kingston

... last day of her life. Under a grave and gentle exterior burned inextinguishable fires of sympathy, energy, devotion, enthusiasm, and absolutely limitless affection. She was always frail in body, and she lived upon her spirit, whose hopefulness and courage were indestructible. Perfect truth, perfect honesty, perfect candor, were qualities of her character which were born with her. Her judgments of people and things were sure and accurate. Her intuitions almost never deceived her. In her judgments ...
— Chapters from My Autobiography • Mark Twain

... a poet of striking originality and impelling force. His writings are the spontaneous outpourings of a rich, full nature, whose main fabric is intellect, but intellect illumined with the glittering light of spiritual hopefulness and flushed with the glow ...
— Halleck's New English Literature • Reuben P. Halleck

... high spirits, they planned for their winter. There were long hours, and little diversion, and the desolation of bleak, snowbound prairies on every side, but through it all they kept up their courage and their hopefulness. Mary spent much time with her needle, from which John, when he felt she was applying herself too closely, beguiled her to a game of checkers or an hour with one of their few but valued books. To supplement their reading matter Mrs. Morrison sent over her little library, which ...
— The Homesteaders - A Novel of the Canadian West • Robert J. C. Stead

... wish she immediately took up her quarters at the parsonage, to leave her no more. But she could not see much difference in her from what she had been for several weeks past; and with the natural hopefulness of childhood, her mind presently almost refused to believe the extremity of the evil which had been threatened. Alice herself was constantly cheerful, and sought by all means to further Ellen's cheerfulness! though careful at the same time to forbid, as far as she could, the rising of the ...
— The Wide, Wide World • Susan Warner


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