Will

  • 41will — 1. v.aux. & tr. (3rd sing. present will; past would) (foll. by infin. without to, or absol.; present and past only in use) 1 (in the 2nd and 3rd persons, and often in the 1st: see SHALL) expressing the future tense in statements, commands, or… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 42Will.i.am — Infobox musical artist Name = will.i.am Background = solo singer Birth name = William James Adams Jr. Born = birth date and age|1975|3|15 Los Angeles, California, USA Died = Instrument = Singing, rapping, keyboards, bass, clavinet, drums, piano… …

    Wikipedia

  • 43WILL — This article is about the radio and television stations. For other uses, see Will. Infobox Broadcast call letters = WILL TV city = station station slogan = The Broadcasting Service of the University of Illinois station branding = WILL TV analog …

    Wikipedia

  • 44will — 1 /wIl/ (modal verb) verb 1 used to express the simple future tense: A meeting will be held next Tuesday at 3 p.m. | What time will she arrive? | When will you be leaving for America? 2 used to show that you are willing or ready to do something:… …

    Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • 45will — I [[t]wɪl[/t]] aux. v. and v. pres. will 1) fun am (is, are, etc.) about or going to: I will be there tomorrow. She will see you at dinner[/ex] 2) fun am (is, are, etc.) disposed or willing to: People will do right[/ex] 3) fun am (is, are, etc.)… …

    From formal English to slang

  • 46will — I. /wɪl / (say wil), weak forms /wəl / (say wuhl), /l / (say l) verb (modal) 1. (indicating future likelihood): I will take a taxi; she will meet us there; do you think it will rain?; you will be surprised. 2. (expressing resolve): I will find it …

  • 47will — An auxiliary verb commonly having the mandatory sense of shall or must. It is a word of certainty, while the word may is one of speculation and uncertainty will, noun Wish; desire; pleasure; inclination; choice; the faculty of conscious, and… …

    Black's law dictionary

  • 48will — I. verb (past would; present singular & plural will) Etymology: Middle English (1st & 3d singular present indicative), from Old English wille (infinitive wyllan); akin to Old High German wili (3d singular present indicative) wills, Latin velle to …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 49will*/*/*/ — [wɪl] modal verb I summary: ■ Will is usually followed by an infinitive without ‘to : She will be angry. Sometimes it is used without a following infinitive: I have never borrowed money, and I never will. ■ In conversation or informal writing… …

    Dictionary for writing and speaking English

  • 50will — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) I n. volition, purpose, determination (See will); testament, bequeathal (see giving). II Volition Nouns will, free will, volition, conation, velleity; freedom, discretion; option, choice; voluntariness,… …

    English dictionary for students