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Wonder   /wˈəndər/   Listen
Wonder

verb
(past & past part. wondered; pres. part. wondering)
1.
Have a wish or desire to know something.  Synonyms: enquire, inquire.
2.
Place in doubt or express doubtful speculation.  Synonym: question.  "She wondered whether it would snow tonight"
3.
Be amazed at.  Synonym: marvel.
noun
1.
The feeling aroused by something strange and surprising.  Synonyms: admiration, wonderment.
2.
Something that causes feelings of wonder.  Synonym: marvel.
3.
A state in which you want to learn more about something.  Synonym: curiosity.



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WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Wonder" Quotes from Famous Books



... changed their minds. They took ship and went away, and all the surviving Trojans, relieved from their siege, rushed down to the shore, where all they found was a monstrous wooden horse. While they were looking at it in wonder, a Greek came out of the rocks, and told them that his name was Sinon, and that he had been cruelly left behind by the Greeks, who had grown weary of the siege and gone home, but that if the wonderful horse were once taken into Troy it would serve as another Palladium. ...
— Aunt Charlotte's Stories of Greek History • Charlotte M. Yonge

... no wonder that some people wish that we had never succeeded in splitting the atom. But atomic power, like any other force of nature, is not evil in itself. Properly used, it is an instrumentality for human betterment. As a source of ...
— State of the Union Addresses of Harry S. Truman • Harry S. Truman

... from 60 to 80 per cent of the cases, but these investigations were not so full as that of the Committee of Fifty, and it is safer to conclude, for the present at least, that intemperance figures as a cause in about fifty per cent in the cases of serious crime. The wonder is that any one cause could figure in so many cases when there are so many varied influences in society depressing men. Of course intemperance can, as has already been said, in large part be ascribed to the ...
— Sociology and Modern Social Problems • Charles A. Ellwood

... "I wonder what they had to say to each other? It strikes one as a rather peculiar proceeding, all the same, to run away from a threatened danger at six in the evening, and at midnight, when nothing has occurred to alter ...
— The Downfall • Emile Zola

... impulses, and emotions bear only remotely upon our present inquiry; as, for instance, the instinct of flight and the emotion of fear, the instinct of curiosity and the emotion of wonder, the instinct of pugnacity and the emotion of anger. Certain others, however, are not merely radical and permanent parts of our nature, but determine human existence, the greater part of its failures and successes, its folly and wisdom, its history and its destiny. Two of these—the parental ...
— Woman and Womanhood - A Search for Principles • C. W. Saleeby


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