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Eutopia

[ yoo-toh-pee-uh ]

noun

Obsolete.
  1. a place in which human society, natural conditions, etc., are so ideally perfect that there is complete contentment.


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Word History and Origins

Origin of Eutopia1

< New Latin (1516); eu-, Utopia
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

MacAskill also touches on this idea in " We Owe the Future," writing that "eutopia," which translates as "good place," is "a future that, with enough patience and wisdom, our descendants could actually build — if we pave the way for them."

From

NORFOLK, Va. — Eutopia Hall didn’t realize she had neglected to sign the bottom of her mail-in ballot for governor until the county board of elections returned the document to her, asking her to complete it.

From

The half-million-dollar home sitting on 1.5 acres, is billed on its website as a unique lifestyle venue known as "Eutopia."

From

The picture was frontispiece of a quarto pamphlet, 'Holland's Leaguer; or, an Historical Discourse of the Life and Actions of Donna Britanica Hollandia, the Arch Mistris of the wicked women of Eutopia: wherein is detected the notorious sinne of Pandarisme,' etc., sm. 4to. printed by A. M. for Richard Barnes, 1632....

From

Searches on the Web and on Lexis-Nexis produced a list of matches all across the country: a mathematical consultant to a program for gifted youth, a realtor, a legal assistant, a high school basketball coach, an Immigration and Naturalization Service agent, a contributor to a lay journal of Catholic thought called Eutopia,and many others.

From

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