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- Dictionarywilled/wɪld/
adjective
- 1. having a specified level of determination: "a free-willed female"
- 2. bequeathed in a will: "willed property"
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Willed is the past tense and past participle of the verb will, which means to want something or to make something happen. Learn how to use willed in different contexts and sentences with examples from the Cambridge English Corpus.
- English (US)
If you will something to happen, you try to make it happen...
- Znaczenie Willed, Definicja W Cambridge English Dictionary
willed definicja: 1. past simple and past participle of will...
- Strong-Willed
STRONG-WILLED definition: 1. If you are strong-willed, you...
- English (US)
Willed definition: having a will (usually used in combination). See examples of WILLED used in a sentence.
Willed is an adjective that means having a will, especially of a certain kind, or deliberate. See synonyms, examples, word history, and related phrases of willed.
'Willed' is an adjective that means having a will, especially a specified kind of will. It is often used in hyphenated compounds such as strong-willed or weak-willed.
Willed means having a will of a specified kind, often used in combination (weak-willed, iron-willed). It also means determined by or proceeding from the will, deliberate. See translations and examples.
If you will something to happen, you try to make it happen by the power of your thoughts: She willed her self to remember his name. [ I or T ] formal. to want something: Stay or go, as you will. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Wanting things.
will something (to somebody) Joe had willed everything he possessed to them. Definition of will verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.