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zeal
/ ziːl /
noun
fervent or enthusiastic devotion, often extreme or fanatical in nature, as to a religious movement, political cause, ideal, or aspiration
Other Word Forms
- zealless adjective
- underzeal noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of zeal1
Word History and Origins
Origin of zeal1
Example Sentences
Once I got through that ordeal—months of chemotherapy, a bone-marrow transplant—I took the task up again, this time with new zeal.
As “True Nature” illustrates, “The Snow Leopard” differs from Matthiessen’s previous nonfiction because it melds science with a spiritual quest, incorporating the author’s newfound zeal for Zen Buddhism.
It didn’t fit with his zeal for living or his disdain for shortcuts.
He spins and faces me, eyes filled with zeal.
Dubbing it “the Californian Ideology,” they argued that the “new faith” blended the “freewheeling spirit of the hippies with the entrepreneurial zeal of the yuppies.”
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