ambition

pronunciation

How to pronounce ambition in British English: UK [æmˈbɪʃn]word uk audio image

How to pronounce ambition in American English: US [æmˈbɪʃn] word us audio image

  • Noun:
    a cherished desire
    a strong drive for success
  • Verb:
    have as one's ambition

Word Origin

ambition
ambition: [14] Like ambient, ambition comes ultimately from the Latin compound verb ambīre ‘go round’ (formed from the prefix ambi-, as in AMBIDEXTROUS, and the verb īre ‘go’, which also gave English exit, initial, and itinerant). But while ambient, a 16th-century acquisition, remains fairly faithful to the literal meaning of the verb, ambition depends on a more metaphorical use.It seems that the verb’s nominal derivative, ambitiō, developed connotations of ‘going around soliciting votes’ – ‘canvassing’, in fact – and hence, figuratively, of ‘seeking favour or honour’. When the word was first borrowed into English, via Old French ambition, it had distinctly negative associations of ‘greed for success’ (Reginald Pecock writes of ‘Vices [such] as pride, ambition, vainglory’, The repressor of overmuch blaming of the clergy 1449), but by the 18th century it was a more respectable emotion.=> exit, initial, itinerant
ambition (n.)
mid-14c., from Middle French ambition or directly from Latin ambitionem (nominative ambitio) "a going around," especially to solicit votes, hence "a striving for favor, courting, flattery; a desire for honor, thirst for popularity," noun of action from past participle stem of ambire "to go around" (see ambient). Rarely used in the literal sense in English, where it carries the secondary Latin sense of "eager or inordinate desire of honor or preferment." In early use always pejorative, of inordinate or overreaching desire; ambition was grouped with pride and vainglory.

Example

1. Arab neighbours have no such ambition .
2. But this is not out of ideology or ambition .
3. Intelligence without ambition is a bird without wings .
4. Ambition or talent : which matters more to success ?
5. The mittelstand has become an ambition .

more: >How to Use "ambition" with Example Sentences