mishope

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English[edit]

Pronunciation[edit]

Etymology 1[edit]

From Middle English mishopen, equivalent to mis- +‎ hope (verb). Cognate with Middle Dutch mishopen, Middle High German missehoffen, Middle Swedish mishoppa.

Verb[edit]

mishope (third-person singular simple present mishopes, present participle mishoping, simple past and past participle mishoped) (obsolete or nonstandard)

  1. (transitive) To fail to hope (in); hope amiss; lose hope; despair.
    • 1846, Joseph Hall, Contemplations on the historical passages of the Old and New Testament:
      This tree was defective in both, yielding nothing but an empty shade to the mishoping traveller.
    • 1870, Rowland Williams, Owen Glendower:
      Not destitute of love to God or Man; But with a serpent's quiet, hissing, hate, To whoso misbelieves, misdeems, mishopes; Nor sparing God himself, if God should spare, Nor loving whoso deems His name is Love, Nor speaking truly of who seeks but truth.
    • 2010, Chang-rae Lee, The Surrendered:
      It was then that Hector was sure that he had won, mishoping, misreading her erotic fervor for a deeper devotion; for he was too young and ignorant to know that she was not acting or dissembling but rather offering herself to his pure and towering want, []

Etymology 2[edit]

From Middle English mishope, equivalent to mis- +‎ hope (noun). Cognate with Middle Dutch mishope, Middle Swedish mishop.

Noun[edit]

mishope (countable and uncountable, plural mishopes) (obsolete or nonstandard)

  1. despair; a hope not realised.
    • 1888, Emily Sarah Holt, In convent walls:
      I was nearhand in utter mishope.
    • 1919, Daniel Carson Goodman, The taker:
      People who are older must know that as life advances it is only a series of hopes and mishopes with something infinite pulling them toward the end.
    • 2005, Anne Gracie, The Perfect Waltz:
      Mishope?” What sort of a name was that? The ton was prone to bestowing nicknames on people he knew, but mishope?

Anagrams[edit]