Dictionary
hopefulness
noun
The property of being hopeful.
Exact(8)
This combination of hopelessness and hopefulness is hard to fathom for someone like me; I can find everything I need spiritually and materially in the city where I live, London.
Ever more go to university, travel abroad and need ideas to stay employable and will pay for an impartial view of the world, one where the editor, whatever his faults (or from now on, her virtues), is in nobody's pocket.Fighting new battlesThe same guarded hopefulness applies to an Economist editor's only true master: the liberal credo of open markets and individual freedom.
"WE ARE facing our own extinction," the 14th Dalai Lama, spiritual leader of the Tibetan people, warns an audience of 450 of his compatriots, before cheering them up with his habitual, chuckling, hopefulness.
This hopefulness is intrinsic to both his work and personality.
Even if that is an exaggeration, there is no mistaking the mood of nervous hopefulness.
In his ads, he claims to offer "the hopefulness of Obama" and "the straight talk of McCain".
Even more remarkable, after a slew of depressing news for the Tibetan cause, was the hopefulness many expressed.
With the Chinese government decrying his Nobel award as a "desecration" and intensifying repression to make its point, such hopefulness seems perverse.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com