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Wishing   /wˈɪʃɪŋ/   Listen
Wishing

noun
1.
A specific feeling of desire.  Synonyms: want, wish.  "He was above all wishing and desire"



Wish

verb
(past & past part. wished; pres. part. wishing)
1.
Hope for; have a wish.
2.
Prefer or wish to do something.  Synonyms: care, like.  "Would you like to come along to the movies?"
3.
Make or express a wish.
4.
Feel or express a desire or hope concerning the future or fortune of.  Synonym: wish well.  Antonym: begrudge.
5.
Order politely; express a wish for.
6.
Invoke upon.  Synonym: bid.  "Bid farewell"



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WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Wishing" Quotes from Famous Books



... fortunate in their investigators. In the spring of 1881, Dr. H.J. Johnston-Lavis, the chronicler for many years of Vesuvian phenomena, was residing in Naples. Impressed by a recent perusal of Mallet's report on the Neapolitan earthquake, and wishing to test the value of the methods explained in the last chapter, he crossed over to Ischia on March 5th; and to his unwearied inquiries extending over more than three weeks and lasting from thirteen to sixteen hours a day, we are ...
— A Study of Recent Earthquakes • Charles Davison

... words I will leave you, Uncle Peter; wishing you as much age in the future as you have ...
— Get Next! • Hugh McHugh

... made friends with her room-mate, a little dumpling of a girl by the name of Agnes Olive Miggs, and was calling her A.O. as every one else did. In five minutes Mary was calling her A.O. too, and wishing a little enviously that either one of these bright friendly girls could have fallen to her lot instead of the polite iceberg ...
— The Little Colonel's Chum: Mary Ware • Annie Fellows Johnston

... of my stay at D * * * had been so sadly quenched, lay like lead upon my memory. My list of subscribers filled slowly, and I had no power of increasing it by any canvassings of my own. My uncle, indeed, had promised to take two copies, and my cousin one; not wishing, of course, to be so uncommercial as to run any risk, before they had seen whether my poems would succeed. But, with those exceptions, the dean had it all his own way; and he could not be expected to forego his own literary labours for my sake; so, through all that glaring summer, and sad foggy ...
— Alton Locke, Tailor And Poet • Rev. Charles Kingsley et al

... invited to England in 1505-6, the position had not changed. He writes to a friend in Holland: 'There are in London five or six men who are thorough masters of both Latin and Greek: even in Italy I doubt that you would find their equals. Without wishing to boast, it is a great pleasure to find that they think well of me.' To Colet in the following year, when he had said farewell, he writes from Paris: 'No place in the world has given me such friends as your City of London: ...
— The Age of Erasmus - Lectures Delivered in the Universities of Oxford and London • P. S. Allen


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