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    will
    [wil]
    verb
    1. expressing the future tense:
      "you will regret it when you are older"
      • expressing a strong intention or assertion about the future:
        "come what may, I will succeed"
    2. expressing inevitable events:
      "accidents will happen"
    3. expressing a request:
      "will you stop here, please"
      • expressing desire, consent, or willingness:
        "will you have a cognac?"
    4. expressing facts about ability or capacity:
      "a rock so light that it will float on water" · "your tank will hold about 26 gallons"
    5. expressing habitual behavior:
      "she will dance for hours"
      • (pronounced stressing “will”) indicating annoyance about the habitual behavior described:
        "he will keep intruding"
    6. expressing probability or expectation about something in the present:
      "they will be miles away by now"
    Origin
    Old English wyllan, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch willen, German wollen, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin velle ‘will, wish’.
    will
    [wil]
    noun
    will (noun) · wills (plural noun)
    1. the faculty by which a person decides on and initiates action:
      "she has an iron will" · "a battle of wills between children and their parents" · "an act of will"
      • control deliberately exerted to do something or to restrain one's own impulses:
        "a stupendous effort of will"
      • a deliberate or fixed desire or intention:
        "Jane had not wanted them to stay against their will" · "the will to live"
      • the thing that one desires or ordains:
        "the disaster was God's will"
    2. a legal document containing instructions as to what should be done with one's money and property after one's death.
    verb
    will (verb) · wills (third person present) · willed (past tense) · willed (past participle) · willing (present participle)
    1. make or try to make (someone) do something or (something) happen by the exercise of mental powers:
      "reluctantly he willed himself to turn and go back" · "she stared into the fog, willing it to clear"
    2. formal
      literary
      intend, desire, or wish (something) to happen:
      "their friendship flourished particularly because Adams willed it" · "he was doing what the saint willed"
    3. (will something to)
      bequeath something to (someone) by the terms of one's will:
      "his father willed the farm to Mr. Timms"
      • leave specified instructions in one's will:
        "he willed that his body be given to the hospital"
    Origin
    Old English willa (noun), willian (verb), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch wil, German Wille (nouns), also to will and the adverb well.
    Translate will to
    No translation found.
    Similar and Opposite Words
    verb
    1. expressing inevitable events:
      have a tendency to
      are bound to
      have a habit of
     
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