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Happy-go-lucky   /hˈæpi-goʊ-lˈəki/   Listen
Happy-go-lucky

adjective
1.
Cheerfully irresponsible.  Synonyms: carefree, devil-may-care, freewheeling, harum-scarum, slaphappy.  "Freewheeling urban youths" , "Had a harum-scarum youth"






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Happy-go-lucky" Quotes from Famous Books



... foreigner coming to England more than our lack of general ideas. Our art criticism is no exception; it, like our literature and politics, is happy-go-lucky and delights in the pot-shot. We often hear this attributed admiringly to "the sporting instinct." "If God, in his own time, granteth me to write something further about matters connected with painting, I will do so, in hope that this art may not rest upon use and ...
— Albert Durer • T. Sturge Moore

... pause, during which Huldah's breast ceased its regular rise and fall; then the clerk laughed sharply and cried with the apparent lightness of a happy-go-lucky temperament: ...
— Room Number 3 - and Other Detective Stories • Anna Katharine Green

... far enough to provide for the happy-go-lucky and mostly ungrateful creatures who had no idea of providing for themselves. He established a sick fund, and to this each of the men who worked for him was obliged to subscribe a trifle out of his ...
— A Girl of the Klondike • Victoria Cross

... of it," I replied. "For half-a-guinea you can cast a camera upon the world, but have you given a moment's consideration to that camera's means of support? No, I thought not. One more proof of the happy-go-lucky spirit of the present day. Yet you know that a camera has to be fed on plates, that it consumes quantities of poisonous acids, and expresses itself on reams of paper. It is altogether a desperate ...
— Punch or the London Charivari, September 9, 1914 • Various

... have made friends of every peasant they met, every fellow traveler on the road, and taught Ruskin in turn a good bit about humdrum, picturesque mankind. And he would have made him laugh! Possibly you think it incongruous, impossible, the picture of happy-go-lucky, ridiculous Bobbie, with his slang and his grin and his outlook on life, and Ruskin, the great critic, the master of style, the intellectual giant. But then you reckon without Bobbie's quality of Penguinity, and without Ruskin's humanness. It is alike impossible to ...
— Penguin Persons & Peppermints • Walter Prichard Eaton


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