English picked up both the concept of hubris and the term for that particular brand of cockiness from the ancient Greeks, who considered hubris a dangerous character flaw capable of provoking the wrath of the gods. In classical Greek tragedy, hubris was often a fatal shortcoming that brought about the fall of the tragic hero. Typically, overconfidence led the hero to attempt to overstep the boundaries of human limitations and assume a godlike status; in response, the gods inevitably humbled the offender with a sharp reminder of human mortality. Take, for example, the story of Phaethon, a mortal son of the sun god Helios. In his hubris, Phaethon drives his father's sun chariot into the heavens but loses control of its horses. The chariot begins to scorch the earth, and Zeus strikes Phaethon down with a thunderbolt.
Examples of hubris in a Sentence
When conceived it was a project of almost unimaginable boldness and foolhardiness, requiring great bravura, risking great hubris.—Simon Winchester, The Professor and the Madman, 1998If you were born Somewhere, hubris would come easy. But if you are Nowhere's child, hubris is an import, pride a thing you decide to acquire.—Sarah Vowell, GQ, May 1998… our belief in democracy regardless of local conditions amounts to cultural hubris.—Robert D. Kaplan, Atlantic, December 1997
His failure was brought on by his hubris.
Recent Examples on the Web
Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to
show current usage.Read More
Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors.
Send us feedback.
But the blind hubris of one of the most powerful people on Earth is less important than what comes later in the scene: Kirsh has already figured out the Xenomorph’s entire life cycle, mastering what it’s taken characters in several Alien films a much longer time to understand.—Alan Sepinwall, Rolling Stone, 19 Aug. 2025 The hubris from these guys is unreal if ur their partner.—James Brizuela, MSNBC Newsweek, 11 Aug. 2025 The hubris of some high tech companies have cost them billions of dollars, spent needlessly.—Karl Freund, Forbes.com, 11 Aug. 2025 Stray observations Peggy’s hubris about her language skills continues in this episode, multiple times, to great effect.—Jake Harris, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, 6 Aug. 2025 See All Example Sentences for hubris
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from Greek hýbris "arrogance, abuse, violence, outrage," of uncertain origin
Note:
A. Nikolaev ("Die Etymologie von altgriechischem ὕβρις," Glotta, 80. [2004], pp. 211-30) connects hýbris with Greek hḗbē "youth, vigor of youth, sexual maturity" (see hebephrenia) taken as descending from Indo-European *(H)i̯ēgwh2-eh2; after a series of assumptions a derivative *Hi̯o/a(h2)gw-ri- becomes *hogwri-, which by Cowgill's Law (*o > *u between a resonant and a labial consonant) results in hýbris. On the semantic side Nikolaev has to assume that hýbris originally meant something like "physical strength," with no negative connotation; this he attempts to demonstrate in passages from Homeric epic and Hesiod. Nikolaev's etymology is roundly rejected by R. Beekes (Etymological Dictionary of Greek, Brill, 2009). Older etymologies proposing that hy- represents a prefix approximately equivalent to epi- "on, upon" are now generally in disfavor.
Share