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A Writer's Dictionary:

willing Definition


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


will2
noun
    1. The power of conscious decision and deliberate choice of action.
      Example: free will
      Example: exercise one's will
    2. One's own preferences, or one's determination in effecting them.
      Example: a clash of wills
      Example: against my will
    3. Desire or determination.
      Example: the will to live
      Thesaurus: desire, inclination, volition, want, wish, pleasure, yearning, craving, longing, hankering; Antonym: indifference.
    4. A wish or desire.
    5a. Instructions for the disposal of a person's property, etc after death;
    5b. The document containing these.
    6. One's feeling towards someone else.
      Example: felt no ill-will towards her
verb willed, willing
    1. To try to compel someone by, or as if by, exerting one's will.
      Example: willed herself to keep going
    2. formal
      To desire or require that something be done, etc.
      Example: Her Majesty wills it
      Thesaurus: command, insist, decree, order, demand, enjoin, request; wish, want, prefer.
    3. To bequeath something in one's will.
Idiom: at will
    As and when one wishes.
Idiom: with a will
    Eagerly; enthusiastically.
Idiom: with the best will in the world
    Note: with negatives
    No matter how willing one is or how hard one tries.
Etymology: Anglo-Saxon willa.





willing
adj
    1. Ready, glad or not disinclined to do something.
      Thesaurus: amenable, open, compliant, consenting, voluntary, disposed, inclined, ready, enthusiastic, eager; Antonym: reluctant.
    2. Eager and co-operative.
    3. Voluntarily given.
Derivative: willingly
adverb
    Readily or gladly; without reluctance or resistance
      Thesaurus: freely, eagerly, unhesitatingly, voluntarily, readily, by choice, cheerfully, gladly, happily.
Derivative: willingness
noun
    Etymology: 14c.



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