Fräulein Smilla
How do you use the word "quixotic" in a sentence? I've just learned a new vocabulary: "quixotic" while watching the TV series "Castle". I've got a rough idea what it means but could someone give me an example sentence with "quixotic"?
Apr 5, 2015 7:53 PM
Answers · 5
Well, I also just learned the word (from you!). You shouldn't worry about that word ever coming up since I as a native speaker have never used it or seen it (maybe if you're in a spelling quiz??). As I see now it's an adjective describing someone to be like Don Quixote, and therefore possibly visionary, chivalrous, or rashly unpredictable. An example would be, Romeo was quite quixotic toward Juliet, the love of his life.
April 5, 2015
Example sentence: "Wouldn't you say that Bob's mission to expose government cover-ups of Mind-Control experiments is rather Quixotic"? (Pronounced: kee-oh-tik, I believe). Don Quixote, if I have heard correctly (never having read the book myself), was a self proclaimed knight who sought to defeat the "giants" (which were really Windmills). On a horse with a lance as his weapon, this would have been an utterly futile quest for many reasons. When someone says that something or another is Quixotic, they are likening it to Don Quixote's quest. (Now, it is entirely possible that I am off on a few details here. If someone knows better, please correct me).
April 5, 2015
Still haven’t found your answers?
Write down your questions and let the native speakers help you!