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Discover LudwigThe phrase "an optimist into" is not a complete part of a sentence and is not grammatically correct
It is possible that it is a fragment of a longer sentence, but on its own it does not make sense. Examples of how it could be used in a complete sentence are: - "He transformed into an optimist after facing numerous challenges in his life." - "She was always an optimist, even when things seemed impossible."
Exact(2)
Really, it's enough to turn an optimist into a pessimist.
Because once the ticket's formed, the presidential candidate is supposed to be uplifting, with soaring rhetoric designed to make everybody feel good about voting such an optimist into the Oval Office.
Similar(57)
Immense failure and disappointment can turn any optimist into a cynic.
The economic news this month looks bad enough to turn even an inveterate optimist into a pessimist.
"There's enough going on to turn you into an optimist," she said.
Over the past quarter-century, it has helped to turn Liu Xiaobo, the Chinese jailbird who is the new Nobel peace-prize laureate, into an optimist.
From Gerhard in Belgium, to Dimitris in Belarus; from Fizle, Slavic, Joe Cheng on the Trans-Siberian; to William, Dominic and Umon on the MV Rus, whether these people realised it or not, these coincidental encounters had helped convert me from a pessimist into an optimist.
I have to be an optimist and turn it into gold...
"I have to be an optimist and turn it into gold".
But this year Gibson turned into an optimist, saying on August 7, 2009, that he hoped "the economy may be finally turning the corner".
And if you can't do that, turn into an optimist.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com