hubris
excessive pride or self-confidence; arrogance.
Origin of hubris
1- Also hybris.
Other words from hubris
- hu·bris·tic, adjective
- non·hu·bris·tic, adjective
- un·hu·bris·tic, adjective
- Compare sophrosyne.
Words Nearby hubris
Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2024
How to use hubris in a sentence
He sees that apathy and hubris activated Flint’s public health crisis in 2014 and fuel it to this day.
In ‘Standpipe,’ David Hardin offers poignant, fleeting reflections on the Flint water crisis | Kerri Arsenault | January 21, 2021 | Washington PostIt takes a lot of hubris to risk your solvency on the assumption rates stay unusually low forever.
In an agency long known for its competence, hubris became the nemesis that could not be overcome.
The CDC’s failed race against covid-19: A threat underestimated and a test overcomplicated | David Willman | December 26, 2020 | Washington PostI maintained that hubris until October of 2017, when my daughter was born.
Heading off hubris was one of the commission’s main concerns, Lifton said.
Strict new guidelines lay out a path to heritable human gene editing | Tina Hesman Saey | September 3, 2020 | Science News
He won re-election twice as governor of New York, and had the hubris to run for a fourth term before being defeated in 1994.
Mario Cuomo, a Frustrating Hero to Democrats, Is Dead at 82 | Eleanor Clift | January 2, 2015 | THE DAILY BEASTWhat were his weaknesses as a military commander: was it hubris?
The hubris of that position did so much to create and compound these problems.
Is It Just Me or Is the World Exploding? So Why Isn’t Obama Doing More? | Michael Tomasky | July 28, 2014 | THE DAILY BEASTCan Clinton help find the elusive middle ground in American foreign policy between the hubris of Bush and the reluctance of Obama?
Downes disparages this as hubris, “man too big for his boots.”
Rackstraw Downes’s Art and Essays Are Two Sides of the Same Genius | Bill Morris | June 4, 2014 | THE DAILY BEASTOr was even as noble a mind as his not proof against the overweening hubris to which a despotic genius has so often succumbed?
India, Old and New | Sir Valentine ChirolEvery year He waxes too strong and commits "hubris," and such sin has its proper punishment.
Euripedes and His Age | Gilbert MurrayEach Year arrives, waxes great, commits the sin of hubris, and then is slain.
Five Stages of Greek Religion | Gilbert MurrayHer hubris was in part, at all events, the result of ignorance.
Before the War | Viscount Richard Burton Haldane
British Dictionary definitions for hubris
hybris
/ (ˈhjuːbrɪs) /
pride or arrogance
(in Greek tragedy) an excess of ambition, pride, etc, ultimately causing the transgressor's ruin
Origin of hubris
1Derived forms of hubris
- hubristic or hybristic, adjective
Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Browse