203 adverbs to describe how to wants

I'll walk up and down, and smoke a cigar; I want one badly."

I merely want to know whether I'm to present it as a defence, or only an explanation.

" Imitative play has, of course, nothing to do with poverty or riches, but is, as Froebel said long since, the outcome of an initiative impulse, sadly wanting in deficient children, an impulse which prompts the child of all lands, of all time and of all classes to imitate or dramatise, and so to gain some understanding of everything and of every person he sees around.

He handed him a tract and catechism, but these the man had read, and specially wanted another book.

He wants her NOW, no matter how she may suffer in consequence of his haste.

I wanted so awfully to knowif you would get an answer.

I sure wanted to.

Secondly, when he learned that Rusty Dick had been killed by Joe, he wanted desperately to get the throttle of the latter under his thumb.

but I honestly want the time to come when we missionaries will be looked upon as the foreign helpers of the Chinese Church; not, as now, controlling the work ourselves and enlisting the services of 'native helpers.'

If she would marry that good-looking mechanic who plainly wanted her.

or is this sight only a delusion to fill us with hopes that's never to be satisfied?" "Pigeons are seldom wanting in this country, Mike, in the spring and autumn; though we have both birds and beasts, in plenty, that are preferable for food.

The ladies, it is true, never, or rarely, want money.

But she wanted passionately to meet her companion's mind.

This basis of ancient poetry was totally wanting in Latium: where the world of gods remained shapeless and legend remained barren, the golden apples of poetry could not voluntarily ripen.

Here and there smiled a plump rosy face enough; but the majority seemed under-sized, under-fed, utterly wanting in grace, vigour, and what the penny-a-liners call 'rude health.'

Their reserves were on the way to their left where they were urgently wanted, there was nothing strong enough to replace such heavy wastage caused to them by the attack of the night of November 1 and the morning of the 2nd, and our big gains of ground were an enormous advantage to us for the second phase in the Gaza sector, for we had bitten deeply into the Turks' right flank.

Bodily wants are fewwarmth and food, nothing more.

But nowadays our people want more.

By the way, Mr. Effingham, he asked me to propose to let him take down your garden fence, in order that he may haul some manure on his potato patch, which wants it dreadfully, he says.

I knew all about this before I was ten years old as well as if I had been forty; and by the time I was twelve, I was a perfect little miser of both clothes and moneyI had such a horror of the terrible days, which sometimes came, when we sorely wanted both.

Personally, I want him to travel.

And just as obviously he wanted the argument merely for the sake of killing time.

this was the dreadful moment which he must spare her, those days of cruel adieus and want afterward, a sad legacy which he could not leave her without thinking himself a criminal.

Secondly, when he learned that Rusty Dick had been killed by Joe, he wanted desperately to get the throttle of the latter under his thumb.

She seemed as if she scarcely wanted him to speak, as if she took it for granted that he had spoken the truth, and that he loved her; and as if it were a joy to her to bare her heart, that he might see how devotedly it throbbed for him and for him alone.

203 adverbs to describe how to  wants  - Adverbs for  wants