pessimism

English

Etymology

From French pessimisme, from Latin pessimus (worst), superlative of malus (bad). As a doctrine, from German Pessimismus as used by the German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer in 1819.

Noun

pessimism (usually uncountable, plural pessimisms)

  1. A general belief that bad things will happen.
  2. The doctrine that this world is the worst of all possible worlds.
  3. (computing) The condition of being pessimal.

Antonyms

Translations

Further reading


Swedish

Noun

pessimism c

  1. pessimism; a general belief that bad things will happen

Declension

Declension of pessimism 
Uncountable
Indefinite Definite
Nominative pessimism pessimismen
Genitive pessimisms pessimismens

Antonyms

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