worldweariness

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English

Noun

worldweariness (uncountable)

  1. Alternative form of world-weariness
    • 2010, Elizabeth Haydon, Requiem for the Sun: A New Adventure in the Symphony of Ages, →ISBN:
      “You get a hold of yourself,” he said contemptuously. “Spare me your bile and worldweariness; my wife would not agree with you."
    • 2012, Todd Rendleman, Rule of Thumb: Ebert at the Movies, →ISBN, page 169:
      He praised Mitchum, always his favorite actor and interview, whose worldweariness was the lost soul of noir.
    • 2016 August 11, Ann Hornaday, “Chris Pine and Ben Foster star in the superb crime thriller 'Hell or High Water'”, in Washington Post:
      As the grizzled, almost-retired lawman on the thieves' trail, Bridges adds a layer of mordant worldweariness to “Hell or High Water.”
    • 2016 October 6, “Adolf Hitler was a 'super junkie', claims new book”, in The Week:
      "Germany, land of drugs, of escapism and worldweariness, had been looking for a super-junkie," Norman Ohler, the author of Blitzed: Drugs In Nazi Germany, writes. "And it had found him, in its darkest hour, in Adolf Hitler."
    • 2018 September 7, Lisa Allardice, “Transcription by Kate Atkinson review – second world war spying hijinks”, in The Guardian:
      Juliet's worldweariness and face-powder dry wit make her an affecting, engaging companion, but not necessarily one to love: she lacks the warmth of Atkinson's most compelling characters.