Willed – definitions in English dictionary
Having a specified level of determination.
Usage examples:
A free-willed female
Usage examples:
Willed property
Make or try to make (someone) do something or (something) happen by the exercise of mental powers.
Usage examples:
Reluctantly he willed himself to turn and go back
Intend, desire, or wish (something) to happen.
Usage examples:
Their friendship flourished particularly because adams willed it
Bequeath something to (someone) by the terms of one's will.
Usage examples:
His father willed the farm to mr timms
Past simple and past participle of
will
Usage examples:
She willed herself to remember his name., stay or go, as you will.
Willed translation into English
Willed: translate from English into Chinese
Willed: translate from English into Dutch
Willed: translate from English into French
Willed: translate from English into German
Willed: translate from English into Hindi
Willed: translate from English into Italian
Willed: translate from English into Korean
Willed: translate from English into Russian
Волевой, Завещанный, Добровольный
Willed: translate from English into Spanish
Word origin
Old English willa (noun), willian (verb), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch wil, German Wille (nouns), also to will1 and the adverb well1.
Willed – similar words
The faculty by which a person decides on and initiates action.
Usage examples:
She has an iron will
Make or try to make (someone) do something or (something) happen by the exercise of mental powers.
Usage examples:
Reluctantly he willed himself to turn and go back
The capability of conscious choice and decision
Willed synonims
Leave (property) to a person or other beneficiary by a will.
Usage examples:
He bequeathed his art collection to the town
To give money or property to others after your death
Usage examples:
Her father bequeathed the business to her.
To arrange for your money or property to be given to someone after your death
Usage examples:
Bequeath sb sth her father bequeathed her the family fortune in his will., bequeath sth to sb picas…
Give an authoritative or peremptory order.
Usage examples:
A gruff voice commanded us to enter
Usage examples:
He obeyed her commands without question
An authoritative direction or instruction to do something
An official order that has the force of law.
Usage examples:
The decree guaranteed freedom of assembly
Order (something) by decree.
Usage examples:
The president decreed that the military was to be streamlined
An order or statement of an official decision
Usage examples:
He refused to carry out the board’s decree., [ + that clause ] the olympic charter decrees that the…
Plan or invent (a complex procedure, system, or mechanism) by careful thought.
Usage examples:
A training programme should be devised
A clause in a will leaving something, especially real estate, to someone.
Usage examples:
The issue, however, is whether the language of the devise of the somerset estate can fairly be inte…
Arrange by systematic planning and united effort
Extending or moving from one place to another without changing direction or stopping.
Usage examples:
There was no direct flight that day
With no one or nothing in between.
Usage examples:
They seem reluctant to deal with me direct
Control the operations of; manage or govern.
Usage examples:
An economic elite directed the nation's affairs
A thing given willingly to someone without payment; a present.
Usage examples:
Wedding gifts
Give (something) as a gift, especially formally or as a donation or bequest.
Usage examples:
The company gifted 2,999 shares to a charity
Gamete intrafallopian transfer, a technique for assisting conception by introducing mixed ova and sperm into a fallopian tube.
Usage examples:
The first successful pregnancy conceived through gift occurred in 1984
Freely transfer the possession of (something) to (someone).
Usage examples:
She gave him presents and clothes
Capacity to bend or alter in shape under pressure.
Usage examples:
Plastic pots that have enough give to accommodate the vigorous roots
Transfer possession of something concrete or abstract
Have (a course of action) as one's purpose or intention; plan.
Usage examples:
The company intends to cut 400 jobs
To have as a plan or purpose
Usage examples:
[ + to infinitive ] we intend to go to australia next year to visit our daughter., [ t ] the remark…
Usage examples:
She left london on june 6
(in snooker, croquet, and other games) the position in which a player leaves the balls for the next player.
Time when one has permission to be absent from work or from duty in the armed forces.
Usage examples:
Joe was home on leave
Make (someone) a priest or minister; confer holy orders on.
Usage examples:
He was ordained a minister before entering parliament
To make someone officially a priest, minister, or rabbi in a religious ceremony
The arrangement or disposition of people or things in relation to each other according to a particular sequence, pattern, or method.
Usage examples:
I filed the cards in alphabetical order
Give an authoritative instruction to do something.
Usage examples:
She ordered me to leave
Logical arrangement of different elements
Move from one place to another.
Usage examples:
He intends to transfer the fund's assets to the treasury
An act of moving something or someone to another place, organization, team, etc.
Usage examples:
A transfer of wealth to the eu's poorer nations
Move from one place to another
Have a desire to possess or do (something); wish for.
Usage examples:
I want an apple
A lack or deficiency of something.
Usage examples:
Victorian houses which are in want of repair
The state of needing something that is absent or unavailable
Feel or express a strong desire or hope for something that cannot or probably will not happen.
Usage examples:
We wished for peace
A desire or hope for something to happen.
Usage examples:
The union has reiterated its wish for an agreement