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serendipity
[ ser-uhn-dip-i-tee ]
noun
- an aptitude for making desirable discoveries by accident.
- accidental discovery, or an instance of this:
Alton’s premiere novel was a serendipity that affected my thinking in the most positive way.
- good fortune; luck:
What serendipity—she got the first job she applied for!
serendipity
/ ˌsɛrənˈdɪpɪtɪ /
noun
- the faculty of making fortunate discoveries by accident
Derived Forms
- ˌserenˈdipitous, adjective
Other Words From
- ser·en·dip·it·er ser·en·dip·i·tist ser·en·dip·per noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of serendipity1
Word History and Origins
Origin of serendipity1
Example Sentences
They're machines for creativity, collaboration, and serendipity.
To preserve the serendipity of finding a random booth in the convention hall, exhibitors can announce, using notifications, that they are hanging out live at their virtual booths.
That a Yank would come along decades later to buy the house felt like serendipity to the family.
Studying millions of objects at a time or executing preplanned programs may be efficient, but science also thrives on serendipity, on astronomers stealing a few moments for an oddball observation or a creative idea.
“It’s definitely an interesting story about serendipity,” says Jared Leadbetter, an environmental microbiologist at Caltech.
Then came one of those weird bits of serendipity that make the writing life—and the book tour—worth all the trouble.
I was thinking of new ways to engage with my audience and with a bit of serendipity and inspiration the cake was born.
I often think about the fall lines of life, the invisible tightropes that divide moments of calamity and serendipity.
More often than not, turncoat spies are successfully recruited as one-offs, through serendipity and dumb luck.
It strips music buying of serendipity and context, making Justin Bieber as important as the Beatles.
It was just six o'clock, and the public-house opposite the Serendipity shop was lighting up.
Serendipity, sėr-en-dip′i-ti, n. a love for rare old books and other articles of virtu.
That polite trifler is fond of a word which he coined himself—'Serendipity.'
It is more than this: it is a matter of observation to any one with a moderate degree of "Serendipity."
They think of serendipity as earned, of work as bestowed, of success as deserved and reserved to the deserving.
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