quixotic

[kwik-sot-ik]

(Rolls off the tongue like the last slice of pizza disappearing mysteriously at movie night.)

adjective
Exceedingly idealistic, unrealistic, and maybe a little dramatic — the emotional equivalent of thinking you can finish all the popcorn before the feature starts.

EXPLANATION

Quixotic describes ideas or quests that are wildly romantic and impressively impractical — like trying to convince your group to watch every Lord of the Rings extended edition in one sitting. It’s bold, it’s ambitious, and it usually ends with stomach aches and emotional vulnerability. The word comes courtesy of Don Quixote, the classic knight-errant who charged windmills like they were dragons — basically the OG binge-watcher who believed every episode would be “the best one yet.”

Origin of quixotic

Recorded in 1805–15 from the character Don Quixote in the novel by Miguel de Cervantes. Translation: dreams big, logic optional – predating early hip-hop and rap music.

Example:

Our plan to hold an entire pizza ‘n’ popcorn-fuelled Harry Potter marathon without any bathroom breaks was wonderfully quixotic — we lasted until Snape’s reveal, later the toilet cursed us and called for reinforcements.

How to use:

You can use quixotic when your friends propose “brilliant” ideas that sound cool in theory — like moving to Paris, starting a podcast about podcasts, or training cats to fetch wallets for snacks, imagine that.


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