hubris

[ UK /hˈuːbɹɪs/ ]
[ US /ˈhjubɹəs/ ]
NOUN
  1. overbearing pride or presumption
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How To Use hubris In A Sentence

  • If the latter endeavor has, since postmodernism, seemed a kind of hubristic folly, "The Artforum.com
  • And "The neoconservative hubris, which sort of assigns to America some kind of geo-strategic responsibility for maximizing democracy, overstretches the resources of a free country. Firedoglake » Can Republicans Put Country Before Party?
  • His decision to specify something bigger, better or more daring than the norm was logical, not hubristic: he believed it would result in a faster, safer, smoother-running railway.
  • His conception of a restrained aristocratic manliness is as applicable to the potentially hubristic - or tyrannical - prince as it is to the courtier.
  • Hubris, sometimes spelled hybris ancient Greek ὕβρις, is a term used in modern English to indicate overweening pride, self-confidence, superciliousness, or arrogance, often resulting in fatal retribution. Touchy, Touchy: Catching Up With "The Climb"
  • His examples from the past reveal that greed, hubris and selfishness often impeded recognition of a problem until it was too late.
  • The principal cause of ruination is wanton excess through the sin of hubris.
  • The likelihood of suffering tragedy increases with a hubristic belief that we have everything under control.
  • Such fabulously unlikeable petulance, such hubris and arrogance. Times, Sunday Times
  • As a Christian I am well aware that pride and hubris precede a fall.
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