Definitions for wold

wold wold

Spelling: [wohld]
IPA: /woʊld/

Wold is a 4 letter English word. It's valid Scrabble word worth 8 points. It's valid Words with friends word worth 9 points.

You can make 29 anagrams from letters in wold (dlow).

Definitions for wold

noun

  1. an elevated tract of open country.
  2. Often, wolds. an open, hilly district, especially in England, as in Yorkshire or Lincolnshire.
  3. weld2 .
  4. the faculty of conscious and especially of deliberate action; the power of control the mind has over its own actions:
  5. power of choosing one's own actions:
  6. the act or process of using or asserting one's choice; volition:
  7. wish or desire:
  8. purpose or determination, often hearty or stubborn determination; willfulness:
  9. the wish or purpose as carried out, or to be carried out:
  10. disposition, whether good or ill, toward another.
  11. Law. a legal declaration of a person's wishes as to the disposition of his or her property or estate after death, usually written and signed by the testator and attested by witnesses. the document containing such a declaration.

verb

  1. a past participle of will1 .

Idioms

  1. at will, at one's discretion or pleasure; as one desires: at one's disposal or command.

auxiliary verb

  1. am (is, are, etc.) about or going to:
  2. am (is, are, etc.) disposed or willing to:
  3. am (is, are, etc.) expected or required to:
  4. may be expected or supposed to:
  5. am (is, are, etc.) determined or sure to (used emphatically):
  6. am (is, are, etc.) accustomed to, or do usually or often:
  7. am (is, are, etc.) habitually disposed or inclined to:
  8. am (is, are, etc.) capable of; can:
  9. am (is, are, etc.) going to: .

verb (used with object)

  1. to decide, bring about, or attempt to effect or bring about by an act of the will:
  2. to purpose, determine on, or elect, by an act of will:
  3. to give or dispose of (property) by a will or testament; bequeath or devise.
  4. to influence by exerting control over someone's impulses and actions:

verb (used without object)

  1. to exercise the will:
  2. to decide or determine:

verb (used with or without object)

  1. to wish; desire; like:

Origin of wold

before 900; Middle English; Old English w(e)ald forest; cognate with German Wald; akin to wild, Old Norse vǫllr plain

Examples for wold

And so, wold was “always on the look out for something better.”

And so to th' ende I wold be blameles, I lay the faute on theyr mysdiettynge.

But no credite was geavin to any that wold say, "Thei mynd to land."

The grater says,” returned Clemency, “Do as you—wold—be—done by.

I exclaimed, "I had not the least idea in the wold that Jeanne had a guardian!"

wold knows plenty of people like him, from policemen to lawyers, who would be happy to get their hands on such a pill.

According to wold, the National Institutes of Health has spent less than $2 million on studying cluster headaches in 25 years.

Long their love did last and hold Till he sought her in the wold.

“Other people tried it, and had amazing results,” wold continues.

“We stress with everyone that they should discuss this with their doctor,” says wold.

Word Value for wold
Scrable

8

Words with friends

9

Similar words for wold
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