singlehearted

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See also: single-hearted

English

Etymology

From single +‎ hearted.

Adjective

singlehearted (comparative more singlehearted, superlative most singlehearted)

  1. Alternative form of single-hearted
    • 1840, James Fenimore Cooper, The Pathfinder, or The Inland Sea:
      “Nay, nay,” interrupted the single-hearted and generous guide; “Jasper wants not for friends in this region, I can assure you; and though seeing the world, according to his habits, may do him good as well as another, we shall think none the worse of him if he never quits us.
    • 1946, Eric Trevor Owen, The Story of the Iliad, →ISBN, page 103:
      But the Achilles depicted there is the same that is revealed here, obsessed with one idea felt with a single-hearted intensity which we can marvel at, even if we cannot comprehend it.
    • 2005, Karen Love, Lies Before Our Eyes: The Denial of Gender from the Bible to Shakespeare and Beyond, →ISBN, page 60:
      Delilah and Samson, Guinevere and King Arthur, Lady Macbeth and Banquo, Lucy Westenra and Jonathan Harker— all provide narrative examples of the duplicitous female and the single-hearted male.