Advertisement

Advertisement

View definitions for wayward

wayward

Advertisement

Discover More

Example Sentences

Finau won that event Monday on the first playoff hole when Cameron Smith was undone by a wayward drive.

For a start, they only detected errors and didn’t actually test out the process for correcting wayward qubits.

In the future, the astronomers hope to understand how these wayward worlds acquired their odd orbits.

I do not wish to be put through any wayward maneuvering, and I am certainly not interested in a romantic relationship with you.

Still, Suggs would be a dream addition for a wayward franchise that hasn’t won a playoff series since 2004 and has struggled to develop a young core in recent years.

It was an intimate and somber plea, like a parent opening an intervention with a wayward child.

How about the man who created her—a lover of women who lived with a wife, his lover, their children, and a wayward librarian?

The story of a wayward anesthesia trainee who took a near fatal dose of fentanyl hit the news this week.

Not to worry, Bob, those wayward thoughts are portals of discovery for an interviewer.

A regal few were spiritual counselors, like Weberman, bringing wayward kids and teens back from the brink of ruined lives.

But agitation unlocks wayward fancies and sends them scurrying inopportunely across the very foreground of the mind.

Mariamne had grown more fantastic, and capricious, and wayward than ever.

A large stone set in a secure place surely is a better boundary than a wayward stream whose course is changed by every freshet.

Observe the wayward boy whose chief inheritance is a wild, wilful nature.

From this companionship a group of wayward children may be formed.

Synonym of the Day

Which one is a synonym for poetry?Get the answer

Start each day with the Synonym of the Day in your inbox!

By clicking "Sign Up", you are accepting Dictionary.com Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policies.

On this page you'll find 92 synonyms, antonyms, and words related to wayward, such as: capricious, delinquent, errant, erratic, headstrong, and rebellious.

From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement