WILD vs NATURE: NOUN
- An uninhabited and uncultivated tract or region; a forest or desert; a wilderness; a waste.
- Plural Wild animals; game.
- A desert; an uninhabited and uncultivated tract or region; a waste.
- An obsolete variant of Weald, perhaps due to confusion with wild.
- A region that is mostly uninhabited or uncultivated.
- A natural or undomesticated state.
- A wild and uninhabited area
- A wild primitive state untouched by civilization
- To die.
- The worship of the personified powers of nature.
- A process of printing from metallic or other plates which have received an impression, as by heavy pressure, of an object such as a leaf, lace, or the like.
- Untamed; uncivilized.
- See under Good and Ill.
- Constitution or quality of mind or character.
- Natural affection or reverence.
- Physical constitution or existence; the vital powers; the natural life.
- Kind, sort; character; quality.
- The sum of qualities and attributes which make a person or thing what it is, as distinct from others; native character; inherent or essential qualities or attributes; peculiar constitution or quality of being.
- Conformity to that which is natural, as distinguished from that which is artificial, or forced, or remote from actual experience.
- The established or regular course of things; usual order of events; connection of cause and effect.
- The personified sum and order of causes and effects; the powers which produce existing phenomena, whether in the total or in detail; the agencies which carry on the processes of creation or of being; -- often conceived of as a single and separate entity, embodying the total of all finite agencies and forces as disconnected from a creating or ordering intelligence.
- The existing system of things; the universe of matter, energy, time and space; the physical world; all of creation. Contrasted with the world of mankind, with its mental and social phenomena.
- See law, 3
- The regular course of human life.
- In theology, in a state of sin; unregencrated.
- Kindly disposition: a natural disposition such that one does not readily take or give offense; an easy, indulgent spirit.
- Spontaneity. abandon; felicity; truth; naturalness.
- Conscience.
- In theology, the natural unregenerate state of the soul; moral character in its original condition, unaffected by grace.
- The vital powers of man; vitality; vital force; life; also, natural course of life; lifetime.
- Inborn or innate character, disposition, or inclination; inherent bent or disposition; individual constitution or temperament; inbred or natural endowments, as opposed to acquired; hence, by metonymy, a person so endowed: as, we instinctively look up to a superior nature.
- The physical or moral constitution of man; physical or moral being; the personality.
- The primitive aboriginal instincts, qualities, and tendencies common to mankind of all races and in all ages, as unchanged or uninfluenced by civilization; especially, the instinctive or spontaneous sense of justice, benevolence, affection, self-preservation, love of show, etc., common to mankind; naturalness of thought, feeling, or action; humanity.
- An original, wild, undomesticated condition, as of an animal or a plant; also, the primitive condition of man antecedent to institutions, especially to political institutions: as, to live in a state of nature.
- Inherent constitution, property, or quality: essential character, quality, or kind; the qualities or attributes whieh constitute a being or thing what it is, and distinguish it from all others; also, kind; sort; species; category: as, the nature of the soul; the divine nature; it is the nature of fire to burn; the compensation was in the nature of a fee.
- Hence That which is conformed to nature or to truth and reality, as distinguished from that which is artificial, forced, conventional, or remote from actual experience; naturalness.
- The material and spiritual universe, as distinguished from the Creator; the system of things of whieh man forms a part; creation, especially that part of it which more immediately surrounds man and affects his senses, as mountains, seas, rivers, woods, etc.: as, the beauties of nature; in a restricted sense, whatever is produced without artificial aid, and exists unchanged by man, and is thus opposed to art.
- . Cause; occasion; that which produces anything.
- Cel. Let us sit and mock the good housewife Fortune. … Those that she makes fair she scarce mates honest, and those that she makes honest she makes very ill-favouredly.
- The metaphysical principle of life; the power of growth; that which causes organisms to develop each in its predeterminate way.
- The forces or processes of the material world, conceived of as an agency intermediate between the Creator and the world, producing all organisms and preserving the regular order of things: as, in the old dictum, “nature abhors a vacuum.” In this sense nature is often persouified.
- Birth; origin; parentage; original stock.
- Heredity.
- The processes and functions of the body, as in healing.
- A kind or sort.
- The set of inherent characteristics or properties that distinguish something.
- The fundamental character or disposition of a person; temperament: : disposition.
- The basic character or qualities of humanity.
- A primitive state of existence, untouched and uninfluenced by civilization or social constraints.
- The world of living things and the outdoors.
- The forces and processes that produce and control these phenomena.
- The material world and its phenomena.
- A causal agent creating and controlling things in the universe
- The natural physical world including plants and animals and landscapes etc.
- A particular type of thing
- The essential qualities or characteristics by which something is recognized
- The complex of emotional and intellectual attributes that determine a person's characteristic actions and reactions
WILD vs NATURE: ADJECTIVE
- Having an equivalence or value determined by the cardholder's choice.
- Deviating greatly from an intended course; erratic.
- Based on little or no evidence or probability; unfounded.
- Highly enthusiastic.
- Impatiently eager.
- Risky; imprudent.
- Furiously disturbed or turbulent; stormy.
- Extravagant; fantastic.
- Full of, marked by, or suggestive of strong, uncontrolled emotion.
- Lacking regular order or arrangement; disarranged.
- Characterized by a lack of moral restraint; dissolute or licentious.
- Disorderly; unruly.
- Lacking supervision or restraint.
- Uncivilized or barbarous.
- Not inhabited or farmed.
- Occurring, growing, or living in a natural state; not domesticated, cultivated, or tamed.
- Without civilizing influences
- (of the elements) as if showing violent anger
- Located in a dismal or remote area; desolate
- Talking or behaving irrationally
- (of colors or sounds) intensely vivid or loud
- Deviating widely from an intended course
- Not subjected to control or restraint
- Marked by extreme lack of restraint or control
- In a natural state; not tamed or domesticated or cultivated
- Produced without being planted or without human labor
- In a state of extreme emotion
- N/A
WILD vs NATURE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To go about in a group threatening, robbing, or attacking others.
- N/A
WILD vs NATURE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To endow with natural qualities.
WILD vs NATURE: ADVERB
- In a wild manner.
- In an uncontrolled and rampant manner
- In a wild or undomesticated manner
- N/A
WILD vs NATURE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Desolate
- Located in a dismal or remote area
- Foolish
- Fanciful and unrealistic
- In a natural state
- Intensely enthusiastic about or preoccupied with
- Fanciful and unrealistic; foolish
- Involving risk or danger
- Without a basis in reason or fact
- A wild and uninhabited area left in its natural condition
- Synonyms and Rude, impetuous, irregular, unrestrained, harebrained, frantic, frenzied, crazed, fanciful, visionary, strange, grotesque.
- In the West Indies, a plant of the genus Tillandsia, especially T. utriculata.
- Gærtnera vaginata, of Réunion, without ground reported as a fit substitute for coffee: often misnamed mussænda.
- The West Indian euphorbiaeeous tree Drypetes glauca.
- A seesaw.
- A locomotive which by some accident or derangement has escaped from the control of its driver.
- See Ipomæa.
- To escape from cultivation and grow in a wild state.
- To escape from domestication and revert to the feral state.
- Desert; not inhabited; uncultivated.
- Growing or produced without culture; produced by unassisted nature, or by wild animals; native; not cultivated: as, wild parsnip; wild cherry; wild honey.
- Savage; uncivilized; ungoverned; unrefined; ferocious; sanguinary: noting persons or practices.
- Noting beasts of the chase, game-birds, and the like, which are noticeably shy, wary, or hard to take under certain circumstances: opposed to tame, 1 : as, the birds are wild this morning.
- Living in a state of nature; inhabiting the forest or open field; roving: wandering; not tame; not domesticated; feral or ferine: as, a wild boar; a wild ox; a wild cat; a wild bee.
- Wide of the mark or direct line, standard, or bounds.
- Excited; roused; distracted; crazy; betokening or indicating excitement or strong emotion.
- Enthusiastic; eager; keen; especially, very eager with delight, excitement, or the like.
- Extravagant; fantastic; irregular; disordered; weird; queer.
- Reckless; rash; ill-considered; extravagant; out of accord with reason or prudence; haphazard: as, a wild venture; wild trading.
- Loose and disorderly in conduct; given to going beyond bounds in pleasurable indulgence; ungoverned; more or less dissolute, wayward, or unrestrained in conduct; prodigal.
- Bold; brave; daring; wight.
- Boisterous: tempestuous; stormy; violent; turbulent; furious; uncontrolled: used in both a physical and a moral sense.
- Self-willed; wayward; wanton; impatient of restraint or control; stirring; lively; boisterous; full of life and spirits; hence, frolicsome; giddy; light-hearted.
- Being in a state of ebullition. Thus steel, solidifying in a mold, which is evolving gases, is said to be wild.
- Natural; growing spontaneously: as, nature grass; nature hay.
- To endow with distinctive natural qualities.
- (proper noun) The sum of natural forces reified and considered as a sentient being, will, or principle.
WILD vs NATURE: RELATED WORDS
- Manic, Violent, Uncontrolled, Tempestuous, Savage, Chaotic, Raving mad, Mad, Unrestrained, Frenzied, Wilderness, Delirious, Undomesticated, Untamed, Feral
- Environment, Intrinsically, Essence, Extent, Inherently, State of nature, Natural state, Natural phenomenon, World, Creation, Wild, Universe, Cosmos, Macrocosm, Existence
WILD vs NATURE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Manic, Violent, Uncontrolled, Tempestuous, Savage, Chaotic, Raving mad, Mad, Unrestrained, Frenzied, Wilderness, Delirious, Undomesticated, Untamed, Feral
- Manner, Scope, Environment, Intrinsically, Essence, Extent, Inherently, Natural state, World, Creation, Wild, Universe, Cosmos, Macrocosm, Existence
WILD vs NATURE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- They require hunters to possess wild pig license tags to hunt wild pigs.
- Colorado Correctional Industries, office furniture, metal fabrication, coloradocelldogs, dogs, Wild Horses, whip, wild mustangs, work clothing, flags, CAD, print.
- He wore his hair in a wild afro style, but that was the only wild thing about him.
- If coffee is wild there is Ethiopian Arabica, Ethiopian wild coffee that we can name wild coffee.
- We also forage for wild foods such as garlic, chanterelles and wild fruits.
- Wild Wild West, Wonder Woman, and Svengoolie still start off the night.
- Wild Wild West out there when buying one.
- Protection of wild animals and wild birds; National Parks.
- The DNR, Michigan Wild Turkey Hunters Association, National Wild Turkey Federation and other groups may offer wild turkey hunter orientation courses.
- European wild boar, Russian wild boar, wild pigs, wild hogs, razorbacks, even piney woods rooters.
- XVII THE BORROWER REPRESENTATIVE Appointment; Nature of Relationship.
- If large, the exact nature should be determined.
- US businesses and was not global in nature.
- NOTE: Briefly describe the date and nature of each oath or affidavit, and the nature of the contradiction.
- Suits of civil nature falls into various categories, depending on the nature of suits, or status of person filing the suit etc.
- Is math something we invented to understand nature, or is it something we found in nature.
- The state of nature is a tough place, so many things might be OK in the state of nature.
- To complete this badge you will also need to visit a local nature conservancy, nature preserve, marine research facility or a farm.
- Not just setting up the laws of nature and letting nature take its course.
- Hurls spores at the enemy, inflicting Nature initially and additional Nature damage over time.
WILD vs NATURE: QUESTIONS
- When was the song Wild Wild West by the Beatles released?
- How much did the Ralston family get from the Wild Wild West?
- When did the original Wild Thing by the Wild Ones come out?
- What kind of gun did Will Smith use in Wild Wild West?
- How many times did Dr Loveless appear on the Wild Wild West?
- How many colors does Robert Conrad Wild Wild West suit come in?
- How many table games at Wild Wild West Atlantic City Casino?
- Is wild Cordyceps sinensis the same as wild cordycep militaris?
- What percentage of wild horses are left in the wild?
- What is the Wild Wild West Casino in Atlantic City?
- What are the different types of Nature Nature Dog Food?
- What is the nature and nature of Education in society?
- What did John Dewey say about the nature of nature?
- What is the nature of human nature according to Xunzi?
- What is the nature of human nature in Chinese philosophy?
- Is nature or nature's purpose more important in giftedness?
- Does Nature Republic royal jelly real nature mask sheet smell?
- What is Nature Nature's Sunshine Products Inc (NSP)?
- What did Galileo believe about the nature of nature?
- Should I use adamant nature or neutral nature Swampert?