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want

[wont, wawnt] / wɒnt, wɔnt /






Usage

What are other ways to say want?

The verb want, usually colloquial in use, suggests a feeling of lack or need that imperatively demands fulfillment: People all over the world want peace. Wish implies the feeling of an impulse toward attainment or possession of something; the strength of the feeling may be of greater or lesser intensity: I wish I could go home. Desire, a more formal verb, suggests a strong wish: They desire liberation.


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

"If it hadn't been for WANT, there's no question that this guy would still be out there."

From Time Magazine Archive

The manhunt, code-named WANT, for Warrant Apprehension Narcotics Teams, was conducted by squads of Marshals Service investigators operating out of eight cities and three foreign countries.

From Time Magazine Archive

Madge printed in large letters the simple words, "WHAT DO YOU WANT?"

From Madge Morton's Secret by Chalmers, Amy D. V.

"What fur kind of a man do you WANT, then?"

From Tillie, a Mennonite Maid; a Story of the Pennsylvania Dutch by Martin, Helen Reimensnyder

They're silly, of course, but they're what I WANT.

From Oh, Money! Money! by Porter, Eleanor H. (Eleanor Hodgman)




Vocabulary lists containing want


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