[Ads-l] Substantial Antedating of "Hopefully" as a Sentence Adverb

Shapiro, Fred 00001ac016895344-dmarc-request at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU
Fri May 22 22:08:57 UTC 2026


The OED's first use for the word "hopefully," used (very controversially) as a sentence adverb, is dated 1932.  Many decades ago I published an article in the journal American Speech pushing sentence-adverbial "hopefully" back to 1851.  This was one of the earliest computer-assisted word antedatings.  A few years thereafter, I asserted in another American Speech article that Cotton Mather had used sentence-adverb "hopefully" in 1702.  Later, I was convinced by others that the Mather use was not really sentence-adverbial.

I now notice a spectacularly early discovery of this usage discussed on the Merriam-Webster website.  Here it is:

This Discourse hath fully approved itself unto the Judgement of all those that have seen it hitherto, and hopefully it would have wrought some effect upon those that mannage the Affairs of this State, if the Danger of this last Commotion, had not employed all their strength and Attention, to save us from sudden Shipwreck.
—Samuel Hartlib, A Further Discoverie of the Office of Publick Address for Accomodations, 1648

I don't know how long ago Merriam-Webster came upon the Hartlib passage, or whether M-W picked it up from some previous discussion.

Fred Shapiro

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The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org


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