Micawber

PRONUNCIATION:
(mih-KAW-buhr) 


MEANING:
noun: An eternal optimist.


ETYMOLOGY:
After Wilkins Micawber, an incurable optimist in the novel David Copperfield (1850) by Charles Dickens. His schemes for making money never materialize, but he’s always hopeful that “something will turn up”. Earliest documented example of the word used allusively: 1852.


USAGE:
“As the shadow work-and-pensions secretary, David Willetts, said yesterday, he takes the Mr Micawber approach to economics: something will turn up.”
Larry Elliott; Mr Micawber May Find Result Misery; The Guardian (London, UK); Nov 4, 2004.

Oct 19 -
MICAWBER

Meta:

Films, quotes, twins, vintage fashion, politics, accessories, bicycles, old fashioned anything, and music.