Discover an assortment of the most cherished and inspiring quotes related to Ennui. Spread the influence of these impactful messages by sharing them on popular social media platforms such as Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blog. Delve into our collection of the Top 100 Quotes and Sayings about Ennui, featuring works from 89 notable authors including Alexandre Dumas,Herman Melville,Mason Cooley,Abraham Verghese,Peter Mayle for you to relish and distribute.

unfavorable feeling, By Alexandre Dumas

Ego non baptiso te in nomine ... but make out the rest yourself. By Herman Melville

Adrenalin dispels boredom. Run, you sufferers from ennui! Run for your lives! By Mason Cooley

Sisters of the Nigrizia By Abraham Verghese

La Closerie, in Ansouis. By Peter Mayle

Busy idleness urges us on.[Lat., Strenua nos exercet inertia.] By Horace

The same word passed through three minds, simultaneously, philosophical, fatalistic, the eternal refuge of the Italian: Pazienza ... By Violet Trefusis

Our call is to an engaged alienation, By Russell D. Moore

ANIENTED (A'NIENTED) adj.[anneantir, Fr.]Frustrated; brought to nothing. By Samuel Johnson

There is a terrible emptiness in me, an indifference that hurts. By Albert Camus

an agony of humiliated indecision By Aldous Huxley

Love, n.I'm not going to even try. By David Levithan

Indu'd With sanctity of reason. By John Milton

Erchomai , I am comingVeni, I have come By Cassandra Clare

Stasis, Iseult det Midenzi told herself for the thousandth time since dawn. Stasis in your fingers and in your toes. By Susan Dennard

I was not, I was, I am not, I care not. (Non fui, fui, non sum, non curo) By Epicurus

Just when you least expect it, enkantos will always have a way of surprising you. By Arnold Arre

Nihil est sine ratione. There is nothing without a reason. By Gottfried Leibniz

His Tender Roni. By Ana E Ross

The satisfaction of a special Pninian craving. By Vladimir Nabokov

What is more miserable than discontent? By William Shakespeare

Gnani (The Enlightened one) means without Ego. By Dada Bhagwan

I grew very weary and irritable with the curate's perpetual ejaculations; By Mary Shelley

Who is free from illusory attachment (nirmohi)? The Gnani Purush (the enlightened one). He can see flesh and bones, through and through. By Dada Bhagwan

The consciousness of the falsity of present pleasures, and the ignorance of the vanity of absent pleasures, cause inconstancy. By Blaise Pascal

Ngari-ngari - literally By Jack London

Resignation, perhaps the most stifling word in the language. By Caitlin Thomas

Entbehren sollst du - sollst entbehren. Thou shalt forego, shalt do without. By Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe

Disillusion in an ache that eats into the dreams of goodness, of love, of any value that matters - even to the very belief in life. By Anne Perry

We are charmed by neatness: Let not your hair be out of order.[Lat., Munditiis capimur: non sine lege capilli.] By Ovid

Cynicism is reality with an alternate spelling. By Woody Allen

He despises what he sought; and he seeks that which he lately threw away.[Lat., Quod petit spernit, repetit quod nuper omisit.] By Horace

The more we deny ourselves, the more the gods supply our wants.[Lat., Quanto quisque sibi plura negaverit,A dis plura feret.] By Horace

Monogamy, monotony. There's only a couple of letters ... By Richard Linklater

Ignominy thirsts for consideration. By Victor Hugo

Under the vague dullness of the gray hours, dissatisfaction seeks a definite object and finds it in the privation of an untried good. By George Eliot

If. A two-letter word for futility. By Sidney Sheldon

Illegitimi non carborundum --don't let the bastards grind you down By Sadie Munroe

indifference but detachment By Anonymous

Bad spellers of the world untie! By Adam Savage

Amor animi arbitrio sumitu, non ponitur; we choose to love; we do not choose to cease loving. By Lauren Groff

Horas non numero nisi serenas,' 'I count - no - hours but - unclouded ones, By Eleanor H. Porter

Something unappeased, unappeasable, is within me. By Friedrich Nietzsche

Until we find Enio, I'm closer to you than your own shadow. By Meg Hennessy

Sluggish idlenessthe nurse of sin. By Edmund Spenser

Am inteles ca un om poate avea totul neavand nimic si nimic avand totul. By Mihai Eminescu

These trifles will lead to serious mischief.[Lat., Hae nugae seria ducentIn mala.] By Horace

One night is awaiting us all, and the way of death must be trodden once.[Lat., Omnes una manet nox,Et calcanda semel via leti.] By Horace

Conceptio culpa Nasci pena Labor vita Necesse mori 'Conception is sin, birth is pain, life is toil, death is inevitable. By Niall Ferguson

I do not wish to die: but I care not if I were dead.[Lat., Emori nolo: sed me esse mortuum nihil aestimo.] By Marcus Tullius Cicero

AMISSION (AMI'SSION) n.s.[amissio, Lat.]Loss. By Samuel Johnson

Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem. No more things should be presumed to exist than are absolutely necessary. By Mark Haddon

Sour taste of obligation postponed, By Roland Merullo

[G]enius is a true degenerative psychosis belonging to the group of moral insanity . . . By Cesare Lombroso

Discontent is want of self-reliance; it is infirmity of will. By Ralph Waldo Emerson

Loneliness ia a human condition By Janet Fitch

Home...Home....the word,...has...no...meaning By Ellen Hopkins

The abdication of BeliefMakes the Behavior small- Better an ignis fatuusThan no illume at all. By Emily Dickinson

Ena milo melomon, frai is frau and swee is too, swee is two when swoo is free, ana mala woe is we! By James Joyce

The most prevalent poetic representation of contemporary experience is the mimesis of disorientation by non sequitor. By Tony Hoagland

Retire me to my Milan, whereEvery third thought shall be my grave. By William Shakespeare

It is necessity and not pleasure that compels us. [Italian: Necessita c'induce, e non diletto.] By Dante Alighieri

I feel an unhappiness which almost dismembers me, and at the same time am convinced of its necessity By Franz Kafka

To paraphrase Antonio Gramsci, cynicism of intellect; promise of the present. By Bill Grigsby

You disenchant me. By Coco J. Ginger

The insupportable labor of doing nothing. By Richard Steele

Ecstatic absurdity: it's the confrontation with meaninglessness. By Errol Morris

An unfinished feeling. By Sylvia Plath

Deliberando saepe perit occasio [The opportunity often slips away while we deliberate on it]. By Publilius Syrus

Trifling trouble find utterance; deeply felt pangs are silent. By Seneca The Younger

Can't you read? The score demands 'con amore', and what are you doing? You are playing it like married men! By Arturo Toscanini

Nothing is so intolerable to man as being fully at rest, without a passion, without business, without entertainment, without care. By Blaise Pascal

Procrastinatio n is still the thief of time. By Martin Luther King Jr.

Indignation must always be the answer to indignity. Reality is not destiny. By Eduardo Galeano

THE GAMBLER,THE NUN & THE RADIOI do not follow you.Many times I do not follow myself with pleasure. By Ernest Hemingway,

In home life contentment is an essential to daily comfort. One discontented person in the house creates an atmosphere fatal to tranquillity. By Margaret Elizabeth Sangster

Retirement is the ugliest word in the language. By Ernest Hemingway,

What is my nothingness to the stupor that awaits you? By Arthur Rimbaud

Omnia Mutantur, Nihil Interit. 'Everything changes, but nothing is truly lost. By Neil Gaiman

Habit is overcome by habit.[Lat., Consuetudo consuetudine vincitur.] By Thomas A Kempis

Act non-action; undertake no undertaking; taste the tasteless. By Laozi

Parturient montes, nascetur ridiculus mus.(Mountains are in labour, a ridiculous mouse will be born) By Horace

Entitlement is the opposite of enchantment. By Guy Kawasaki

Assent was indignant & universal By David Mitchell

Erised stra ehru oyt ube cafru oyt on wohsi By J.k. Rowling

Without businesse debauchery. By George Herbert

Indolence is the sleep of the mind. By Luc De Clapiers

Veni, vidi, flevi.I came. I saw. I cried. By Dorian Cirrone

Je ne fais aucun mal en restant ici.I do no harm by remaining here. By Richard Powers

Anni, amori e bicchieri di vino, nun se contano mai."' '"Years, lovers and glasses of wine; these things must not be counted. By Anthony Capella

We are amused through the intellect, but it is the heart that saves us from ennui. By Sophie Swetchine

ANGELFOODNNAA NNM NWNWNW V By Eugene Ionesco

Impossibility, like wineExhilarates the manWho tastes it; PossibilityIs flavoreless. By Emily Dickinson

The emptiness of our boredom met with the emptiness of these supposed signs. By Witold Gombrowicz

Of all the cankers of human happiness, none corrodes it with so silent, yet so baneful, a tooth, as indolence, By Jon Meacham

Indignation is a submission of our thoughts, but not of our desires. By Bertrand Russell

Absurdity of absurdities. By Fyodor Dostoyevsky

A nightmare has taken hold of my body. Lunacy has dug its way inside my mind. By Amanda Steele

All neurotics, and many others besides, take exception to the fact that 'inter urinas et faeces nascimur. By Sigmund Freud

Intemperance is the epitome of every crime, the cause of every kind of misery. By Douglas William Jerrold