Advertisement
Advertisement
willfully
[wil-fuh-lee]
adverb
deliberately or intentionally; on purpose.
Any seller who knowingly or willfully certifies false statements is subject to fine and imprisonment.
in an unreasonably stubborn or headstrong way.
The student disrupted school activities and willfully defied the authority of teachers, administrators, and other school employees.
Other Word Forms
- half-willfully adverb
- half-wilfully adverb
- unwillfully adverb
- unwilfully adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of willfully1
Example Sentences
By Sony’s telling, Cox willfully refused to cut these alleged music thieves off from its service because it didn’t want to lose their business.
“Do not speak to me of cruelty, Miss Lumley. Better Fredrick believe me dead than to think I abandoned him willfully. You of all people ought to know how it feels to be left behind.”
That’s a reference to the Dunning-Kruger effect — you know, the tendency of those willfully or unalterably ignorant to vastly overestimate their abilities and/or intelligence.
From the journals Metcalfe has surmised that Vivien, herself a brilliant literary scholar and teacher, had willfully lived out her marriage under Blundy’s shadow, the dutiful handmaiden to a literary eminence.
All Californians need to stand up to people who not only want to remain willfully ignorant about the bad parts of our history but also want to stop others from learning about them.
Advertisement
Related Words
- consciously
- knowingly www.thesaurus.com
- pointedly
- purposely
- studiously www.thesaurus.com
- voluntarily
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse