English edit

Etymology edit

From forever +‎ -hood.

Noun edit

foreverhood (uncountable)

  1. The state or condition of existing or lasting forever
    • 1959, Ray Russell, The Permanent Playboy:
      In fact who knows but that it isn't the solitude of the oneness of the essence of everything, the solitude of the actual oneness of the unbornness of the unborn essence of everything, nay the true pure foreverhood, that big blank potential that can ray forth anything from its pure store, that blazing bliss, Mattivajrakaruna the Transcendental Diamond Compassion!
    • 1993, Howard Dorgan, The Airwaves of Zion:
      Married fifty years and partnered performers for the same amount of time, they have been what Eleanor calls "childhood, adulthood, and foreverhood sweethearts."
    • 2011, Anthony Haas, Dawn Peyote:
      Run for Thomas thumb of poetry, sleep writing ghost writing moon quirk of telepathic trancedom in the frilly belly of liver damage and a gargoyle leading me to the lions to the tongues speaking in eyes to the foreverhood of black to the season of water to the male to Whitman's song to the heavenly fire of always.

Synonyms edit