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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.

I wa’n’t more than ten feet from the cruiser when she hit it.

From "Looking for Alaska" by John Green

I reached down to the sortin' table where I'd laid the letter at noon time—and it wa'n't there.

From The Postmaster by Lincoln, Joseph C.

Ben was the best of the two, but he wa'n't none too likely.

From Jessie Graham by Holmes, Mary J.

He'd gone away on Friday cal'latin' to be back Monday with a fresh lot of "antiques" and centerpieces; but he wa'n't.

From The Postmaster by Lincoln, Joseph C.

"There wa'n't no peace at all, sir, so long as Mr. Williams were here; when he were gone there wa'n't so many of them, an' we got a rest, which I were mighty thankful for."

From Historic Waterways?Six Hundred Miles of Canoeing Down the Rock, Fox, and Wisconsin Rivers by Thwaites, Reuben Gold




Vocabulary lists containing want


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