The essential message of Don Quixote is that morality is not the same everywhere. Another essential message to take away from this story is that there is a sharp division between wealth and class.
The noun form of the adjective 'quixotic' is quixotism.The word 'quixotic' is an adjective derived from the proper noun Don Quixote.
The adjective quixotic is derived from Don Quixote by Cervantes. I don't know if he is the first but that is where the word comes from.
Don Brickote
The word quixotic is derived from the book Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra. It means that someone has an unbridled optimism that verges on impracticality.
Trade don bricktote for it. I am on mln: benjamin6348
Miguel de Cervantesfor those in A+ :)
give don brickote 3 blue bricks on his page
Like Don Quixote; romantic to extravagance; absurdly chivalric; apt to be deluded.
(quixotic - from Don Quixote, related to a noble or idealistic, yet impractical pursuit)Many readers are attracted to quixotic love stories, rather than realistic romance.The parish priest began a quixotic attempt to preserve the crumbling old church.
it comes from the novel "don quixote" definition is here: http://dictionary.reference.com/wordoftheday/archive/2001/09/20.html
The term "quixotic" originates from the character Don Quixote, the protagonist of Miguel de Cervantes' early 17th-century novel "Don Quixote." The character embodies idealism and impracticality, as he embarks on misguided adventures in pursuit of chivalric ideals. The word has since come to describe someone who is exceedingly idealistic or romantic in a way that is unrealistic or impractical.
"Quixotic" is an example of original diction, as it is a unique word derived from the character Don Quixote, representing someone who is idealistic and impractical.