Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- adjective Deviating from what is desired, expected, or required, especially in being disobedient or in gratifying one's own inclinations.
- adjective Difficult or impossible to manage, control, or keep in order.
- adjective Going somewhere not intended or desired.
- adjective Following no clear pattern; unpredictable.
from The Century Dictionary.
- Full of caprices or whims; froward; perverse.
- Irregular; vacillating; unsteady, undulating. or fluctuating: as, the wayward flight of certain birds.
- Synonyms Wayward, Wilful, Contrary, Untoward, headstrong, intractable, unruly. The italicized words tend toward the same meaning by different ways. Wayward, by derivation, applies to one who turns away from what he is desired or expected to be or to do; but. from its seeming derivation, it has come to apply more often to one who turns toward ways that suit himself, whether or not they happen to be what others desire. Wilful suggests that the person is full of self-will, which asserts itself against those whose wishes ought to be deferred to or whose commands should be obeyed. Contrary and untoward express the same idea, the one in a positive, the other in a negative form. Contrary is an energetic word, expressing the idea that one takes, or is disposed to take, the course exactly opposite to that which he is expected or desired to take. Contrariness, when ingrained, becomes perverseness: as, a contrary disposition; a contrary fellow. This use of contrary is by many considered colloquial, but has the recommendation of figurative force. Contrary and untoward view the person as one to be managed; untoward views the person also as the object of mental or moral discipline: this perhaps through its use in Acts ii. 40. An untoward person is not responsive to persuasion, advice, influence, or requests; untoward circumstances are similarly such as do not help us in our plans. All these words imply that the only consistency in the person's conduct is in this self-willed independence of others' wishes or opposition to them, but untoward implies it least. See
perverse .
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- adjective Taking one's own way; disobedient; froward; perverse; willful.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- adjective given to
wilful ,perverse deviation from theexpected norm ; tending tostray - adjective
obstinate ,contrary andunpredictable - adjective sports not on target
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- adjective resistant to guidance or discipline
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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Pastor Collom's ties with the kids relate to his own youth, which he describes as wayward on his chapter's Web site.
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Pastor Collom's ties with the kids relate to his own youth, which he describes as wayward on his chapter's Web site.
Vail Daily - Top Stories Derek Franz dfranz@eaglevalleyenterprise.com 2009
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Pastor Collom's ties with the kids relate to his own youth, which he describes as wayward on his chapter's Web site.
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"Someone's Gonna Rescue You" is not exactly Young's finest compositional hour a directionless tune sung partly in wayward falsetto.
Neil Young: Le Noise Kitty Empire 2010
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As for our little Madelon, the small, round, pinafored child was hardly recognisable in this slim little girl, in white frock, with brown hair that hung in short wayward tangling waves, instead of curling in soft ringlets all over her head; and yet Graham, who rarely forgot
My Little Lady Eleanor Frances Poynter
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But instead of providing Jeremy with the support he needed, the Westerly School Department filed a petition with the state's family court asking that Jeremy be found "wayward" - a hopelessly technical term that few parents or kids understand - on the basis of his alleged
Blog of Rights: Official Blog of the American Civil Liberties Union Yelena Konanova 2010
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All accounted for, then pondered, one worries about how best to change the direction of what some might call a wayward ways.
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Indeed, given the parochial concerns that members of Congress have with getting themselves re-elected, and given the power of the president to threaten and cajole members of Congress, it might be argued that Jefferson was prescient in seeing the need to provide an "outside-the-Beltway" avenue -- closer to the people -- for calling a wayward or criminal chief executive to account.
Message to Washington State Legislators (and to those in VT, NM and elsewhere) 2007
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Present day scientists have thus chosen to call a wayward and menacing celestial body Apophis.
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Please tell me what in the world BET has to do with this story about the KKK or about those so-called wayward children in Nashville?
"KKK" Painted On 2 Cars Nathaniel Livingston 2006
Prolagus commented on the word wayward
Song quotation on elope.
September 16, 2008