WILD vs VIOLENT: 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
- An assailant.
- One acting with violence.
WILD vs VIOLENT: 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
- Intensely vivid.
- Likely to use physical force.
- Involving physical conflict.
- Involving extreme force or motion.
- Rents or profits of an estate obtained by a tenant wrongfully holding over after warning. They are recoverable in a process of removing.
- Presumption of a fact that arises from proof of circumstances which necessarily attend such facts.
- Produced or effected by force; not spontaneous; unnatural; abnormal.
- Acting, characterized, or produced by unjust or improper force; outrageous; unauthorized.
- Moving or acting with physical strength; urged or impelled with force; excited by strong feeling or passion; forcible; vehement; impetuous; fierce; furious; severe
- Tending to distort meaning or intent.
- Vivid, as in brightness or saturation.
- Characterized by extreme emotion, especially anger.
- Intense or extreme, especially in emotion.
- Very forceful.
- Given to physical violence.
- Caused by unexpected force or injury rather than by natural causes.
- Characterized by or displaying physical violence.
- Causing or intending to cause damage, injury, or death, often when involving great force.
- Marked by extreme intensity of emotions or convictions; inclined to react violently; fervid
- Characterized by violence or bloodshed
- Acting with or marked by or resulting from great force or energy or emotional intensity
- Effected by force or injury rather than natural causes
- (of colors or sounds) intensely vivid or loud
WILD vs VIOLENT: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To go about in a group threatening, robbing, or attacking others.
- To be violent; to act violently.
WILD vs VIOLENT: ADVERB
- In a wild manner.
- In an uncontrolled and rampant manner
- In a wild or undomesticated manner
- N/A
WILD vs VIOLENT: 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.
- Fervid
- Inclined to react violently
- To act or work with violence; be violent.
- To urge with violence.
- Poignant, exquisite.
- Compelled; compulsory; not voluntary.
- In general, intense in any respect; extreme: as, a violent contrast; especially, of pain, acute.
- Vehement mentally, or springing from such vehemence; fierce; passionate; furious.
- Acting or produced by unlawful, unjust, or improper force; characterized by force or violence unlawfully exercised; rough; outrageous; not authorized.
- Produced, effected, or continued by force; accompanied by extraneous or unnatural force; unnatural.
- Characterized by strong and sudden physical force; impetuous; furious.
WILD vs VIOLENT: RELATED WORDS
- Manic, Violent, Uncontrolled, Tempestuous, Savage, Chaotic, Raving mad, Mad, Unrestrained, Frenzied, Wilderness, Delirious, Undomesticated, Untamed, Feral
- Tough, Furious, Lashing, Raging, Fierce, Wild, Unnatural, Intense, Lurid, Convulsive, Vehement, Terrorist, Ferocious, Savage, Bloody
WILD vs VIOLENT: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Manic, Violent, Uncontrolled, Tempestuous, Savage, Chaotic, Raving mad, Mad, Unrestrained, Frenzied, Wilderness, Delirious, Undomesticated, Untamed, Feral
- Tough, Furious, Lashing, Raging, Fierce, Wild, Unnatural, Intense, Lurid, Convulsive, Vehement, Terrorist, Ferocious, Savage, Bloody
WILD vs VIOLENT: 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.
- Violent madmen were locked up at home; peaceable lunatics were simply left at large; and none, violent or peaceable, received care of any sort.
- Are individuals allowed to leave a child unsupervised with a sexual offender, sexually violent predator, or sexually violent delinquent child?
- He was avery gentle man, but he loved writing about violent things, and he greatly admired people that could do violent things.
- If the serious infraction constitutes a violent felony, then the case shall be handled by the Violent Felony Unit.
- So, if theywatched the most violent show infrequently they might get a similar score tosomeone who watched a less violent show frequently.
- The Ripp Hobble is designed to secure the ankles or knees of a violent or potentially violent person.
- In short, viewing violent television hasbeen identified as a causal factor in increases in violent behavior and increasesin callousness toward violence.
- This enhances the learning of violent behavior among the children who find pleasure in violent video games.
- Neighbors of the sexually violent predator or sexually violent delinquent child.
- It is a federal law enforcement effort to arrest violent criminals committing violent crimes.
WILD vs VIOLENT: 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 does Friar Lawrence mean when he says Violent Delights have violent ends?
- What does Friar Lawrence mean by these violent delights have violent ends?
- Is the HCR-20 valid for violent and non-violent sexual behaviour?
- Is there a 100% proof that violent games make you violent?
- Are violent video games associated with violent behaviour in adolescents?
- Are violent movies more moral than violent football?
- Are violent stranger en-counters between strangers really violent?
- Do violent youths inherit violent behavior from their parents?
- Do violent and aggressive music lyrics provoke violent behavior?
- Do violent people become violent by watching violent deeds?