| 释义 | 
		Definition of Pangloss in English: Panglossnoun ˈpaŋɡlɒsˈpanɡlôs A person who is optimistic regardless of the circumstances.  as factories moved out of the US in the 1970s, the Panglosses of the day called it progress  Example sentencesExamples -  The President is ineligible for a Panglossotherwise he'd win it every time.
 -  Brad Setser and Nouriel Roubini portray us as modern-day Panglosses for expecting an orderly adjustment of global economic imbalances and sustained U.S. hegemony.
 -  One needn't be a Pangloss to dismiss the notion that the world can ever get ‘better.’
 -  By the novel's end Pawkie, like a Scottish Pangloss, is announcing that reform is in the air and that the world is becoming better and better.
 -  This is all part of a Pangloss view.
 
 
 Derivatives   adjective   The film suggests that US rehabilitation involves lots of hugs, tears, group chants, and saccharine effusions of Panglossian optimism.  Example sentencesExamples -  Like Hammond, Athanasiou argues that the various modes of Panglossian optimism that envisage only win-win scenarios obscure the fact that humanity now faces some tough choices and problems.
 -  It's a pleasant vision of the future, but maybe just a touch Panglossian.
 -  The Panglossian optimism underpinning such remarks obscures other more serious flaws: To offset the shortfall in domestic savings, the US private sector has been borrowing from abroad.
 -  In this Panglossian vision, the unfettered market economy is the best of all possible worlds.
 
 
 
 Origin   Late 18th century: from the name of the tutor and philosopher in Voltaire's Candide (1759).    Definition of Pangloss in US English: Panglossnounˈpanɡlôs A person who is optimistic regardless of the circumstances.  as factories moved out of the US in the 1970s, the Panglosses of the day called it progress  Example sentencesExamples -  By the novel's end Pawkie, like a Scottish Pangloss, is announcing that reform is in the air and that the world is becoming better and better.
 -  This is all part of a Pangloss view.
 -  The President is ineligible for a Panglossotherwise he'd win it every time.
 -  One needn't be a Pangloss to dismiss the notion that the world can ever get ‘better.’
 -  Brad Setser and Nouriel Roubini portray us as modern-day Panglosses for expecting an orderly adjustment of global economic imbalances and sustained U.S. hegemony.
 
 
 Origin   Late 18th century: from the name of the tutor and philosopher in Voltaire's Candide (1759).     |