aimlessness
aim·less
A0156100 (ām′lĭs)Aimlessness
See Also: BELONGING, EMPTINESS
- Aimless as an autumn leaf borne in November’s Idle Winds —Paul Hamilton Hayne
- Chuckled aimlessly, like an old man searching for his spectacles —James Crumley
- The crowd scurried aimlessly away like ants from a disturbed crumb —O. Henry
- Drift about … aimlessly as a ghost —Lawrence Durrell
- Drifted like winter moons —Richard Wilbur
- Drifting like breath —Robert Penn Warren
- Drifts like a cloud —Dante Gabriel Rossetti
- He was without subject matter, like a tennis player in the Arctic or a skier in Sahara’s sand —Delmore Schwartz
- Kept going … like a car without a driver —Cornell Woolrich
Woolrich’s description of aimlessness is a variant of “Aimless as a ship without a rudder;” in fact, in his story, Dawn to Dusk, Woolrich used the two similes together.
- Lived from day to day as if the years were circular —Alice McDermott
- Never really taking hold of anything, he slides in and out of jobs like a wind-up toy sledding about until the inevitable slowdown —Alvin Boretz, film treatment
- Ran out of motives, as a car runs out of gas —John Barth
- Walking in aimless circles like children during a school fire drill —James Crumley
- Wandered about at random, like dogs that have lost the scent —Voltaire
Noun | 1. | aimlessness - the quality of lacking any definite purpose |