A free service provided by Writers Nexus International

Writing Resources:
  • New Novelist Software
  • Writer Circles
  • Author Me
  • FirstWriter.com
  • Novel Advice
  • Robin's Nest for Writers
  • The Scriptorium
  • Women on Writing


A Writer's Dictionary:

wildest Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with W » wigglier ... winced » wildest


wild
adj wilder, wildest
    1. Said of animals: untamed or undomesticated; not dependent on humans.
      Thesaurus: feral, undomesticated.
    2. Said of plants: growing in a natural uncultivated state.
    3. Said of country: desolate, rugged, inhospitable or uninhabitable.
    4. Said of peoples: savage; uncivilized.
      Thesaurus: uncivilized, primitive, savage, barbarous.
    5. Unrestrained; uncontrolled.
      Example: wild fury
      Thesaurus: uncontrolled, unrestrained, unmanageable, unruly, fractious, disorderly.
    6. Frantically excited.
    7. Distraught.
      Example: wild with grief
    8. Dishevelled; disordered.
      Example: wild attire
    9. Said of the eyes: staring; distracted or scared-looking.
    10. Said of weather: stormy.
    11. Said of plans or hopes, etc: crazy; impracticable or unrealistic.
      Thesaurus: bizarre, strange, daft, crazy, lunatic, way-out (slang).
    12. Said of a guess: very approximate, or quite random.
      Thesaurus: inaccurate, erratic, mistaken, wrong, unsound, off.
    13. colloq
      Furious; extremely angry.
    14. slang
      Enjoyable; terrific.
noun
    1. A wild animal's or plant's natural environment or life in it.
      Example: returned the cub to the wild
      Form: the wild
    2. Lonely, sparsely inhabited regions away from the city.
      Thesaurus: wilderness, wasteland, backveld, outback, desert, boondocks (US slang), the sticks, the back of beyond, the middle of nowhere.
      Form: wilds
Derivative: wildish
adj
    Derivative: wildly
    adverb
      Derivative: wildness
      noun
        Idiom: run wild
          Said of a garden or plants: to revert to a wild, overgrown and uncultivated state.
          Said eg of children: to live a life of freedom, with little discipline or control.
        Idiom: wild about someone or something
          Intensely fond of or keen on them or it.
        Idiom: wild and woolly
          Unrefined or unpolished; crude.
        Etymology: Anglo-Saxon wilde.



        Click Here