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词汇 wild
释义

Definition of wild in English:

wild

adjective wʌɪldwaɪld
  • 1(of an animal or plant) living or growing in the natural environment; not domesticated or cultivated.

    (动植物)野的;野生的;未栽培的;未驯化的

    a herd of wild goats
    wild strawberries
    Example sentencesExamples
    • All around us the wild grasses are growing, heavy with seeds not yet ripened.
    • The steady economic development has caused residences and public infrastructures to grow like wild grass.
    • The hearths contained burnt animal bone, including wild pig, fox, bird, either a dog or a wolf, and possibly a bear.
    • Like its cultivated successors, the wild vine is a climbing plant which needs to grow up some support.
    • Dragons eat any animals they can catch, up to the size of wild pigs, goats, deer, and water buffaloes and occasionally including human beings.
    • The only noise that came to me was from the soles of my boots brushing against the wild grass growing on the weathered road.
    • Natural growths of wild grass of a different species were pollinated by the gene-modified grass nearly nine miles away.
    • We enjoy long walks on the trails searching for the perfect walking stick, tracking deer, wild pigs and other animals.
    • A true hunter is concerned with propagating natural, wild species while harvesting a few for the table.
    • They also enjoyed the tales given by Michael on the history and folklore of the area and learned a great deal about the wild herbs and flowers growing there.
    • The red-brick mansion looks shabby with parts of it damaged and wild bushes growing around it.
    • Another of the joys of the Inca Trail and Machu Picchu are the wild orchids that grow, although now in decreasing numbers as tourists pick them.
    • When mist fills the Himalayan valleys and heavy monsoon rain sweeps across the hills, it is natural for the wild creatures to seek shelter.
    • The domestic apple, a hybrid of several wild species, is grown extensively in cool temperate regions of the world.
    • The verges have grown profuse with wild grasses and flowers.
    • Avian flu is naturally present in wild birds and can easily spread to poultry.
    • But it was not too hard to do this at this time of year when wild grass grew abundantly in the fields.
    • All the sunflowers that were planted last summer were brown, wild shrubs grew abundantly, and weeds consumed the few lilies that were trying desperately to live.
    • Trees are cut down to grow cash crops and wild creatures are shot.
    • Or they can do what Kiwis do best: tramp along the ten-mile Moeraki Valley trail system, where wild orchids grow.
    Synonyms
    untamed, undomesticated, feral
    unbroken
    fierce, ferocious, savage
    uncultivated, natural
    native, indigenous
    technical agrestal
    1. 1.1 Produced from wild animals or plants without cultivation.
      产自野生动植物的
      wild honey

      野生天然蜂蜜。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Insects or their by-products such as honey are another form of wild food.
      • For £150 a year, anyone can adopt a sheep and in return be sent four kilos of pecorino, wild honey, jams and some woollen jumpers.
      • As far as the commercial growers were concerned the man used strains which were almost wild.
      • There are some women's units making excellent bath soaps by adding exotic ingredients like honey, saffron, wild turmeric or sandal.
      • The smell is of locusts and wild honey, like John the Baptist's menu.
  • 2(of a place or region) uninhabited, uncultivated, or inhospitable.

    an expanse of wild moorland
    the wild coastline of Cape Wrath

    拉斯角荒芜的海岸线。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Families, organisations and schools are being urged to take part in a new award for Cumbria which aims to encourage people of all ages to discover and conserve wild places.
    • Clearly his is a cack-handed attempt to cash in on the growing public desire to take wild places into the ownership and control of the communities that live around them.
    • Like most mountaineers, he felt alive in high, wild places.
    • I think that instilled a love for landscape, for wild places and open spaces.
    • A majority of people agree that there should be large tracts of wild places kept aside that belong to no one person but where any of us can go.
    • But underneath the glossy picture postcard image is a harsh, rugged, wild landscape that is my main source of inspiration.
    • Despite our predilection for the world's wild places, Sara and I also enjoy a little culture now and again.
    • Only by visiting such places will we learn to appreciate our country's wildlife and wild places.
    • I reckon my love of nature and of wild places started out with Romany.
    • It is always so surprising to arrive at a populated town after travelling through such uninhabitable, wild terrain.
    • People can move to new places and be happy again but wild habitats and heritage site cannot be moved and once destroyed cannot be restored.
    • Explore, enjoy and protect the wild places of the earth.
    • But he wrote about a kind of decaying Britain; about towns and suburbs and rolling countryside more often than wild places.
    • Fred had a warm and generous nature, coloured by a certain eccentricity, and he loved the wild places of the world.
    • When I was fortunate enough to find a good job in Perth in 1975 I was eager to return and revisit those beautiful, wild places I had known as a child.
    • Quite how the developer thinks this remote area, that is only penetrated by one minor road, is not a wild place beggars belief.
    • The land was wild and empty, but there always seemed to be a human shape lurking in the tunnels.
    • More of the world's wild places have been destroyed and millions of people have suffered from extreme weather events.
    • And population pressures are causing heavy damage to the world's remaining wild places.
    • David was lauded for his work by being promoted to BBC Director of Programs, but he missed his field trips to wild places and asked that occasionally he be allowed out of his suit.
    Synonyms
    uninhabited, unpopulated, uncultivated, unfarmed, unmanaged, virgin
    rugged, rough, inhospitable, desolate, empty, deserted, trackless, waste, barren
    1. 2.1 (of sea or the weather) rough and stormy.
      a wild, bitterly cold night
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The titles were decimated due to the wild weather conditions with many events cancelled.
      • Overhead a rogue seagull stands on the wind, silent, but a sign there's wild weather on the way.
      • Much of the Midwest is on alert tonight for severe storms after a weekend of wild weather.
      • For me the wild seas and the cold were really tough.
      • Also tonight, wild weather in the west as major Pacific storms pour down on already saturated areas.
      • These trends are bound to continue into 2001, with more people around the world being displaced by floods, endangered by wild weather and starved by droughts.
      • It is a shrub, rather than a tree, and its size will be limited on the crags because of the wild weather conditions it has to endure.
      • In the event, only one cup game and four in lower divisions survived the wild weather.
      • The fact that this meant taking a ship with a dodgy condenser round Scotland through the wild seas of January doesn't seem to have worried anybody.
      • Presumably the fact that Scots are accustomed to wild weather helps.
      • The 19-ton vessel worked much of New Zealand's west coast, pounding through wild seas.
      • There's something primal and deeply satisfying about sitting indoors, all warm and snug and listening to wild weather beating at the eaves.
      • Police have warned boat enthusiasts to be cautious during wild weather, after a dramatic rescue on the River Derwent yesterday.
      • A few days back I thrilled to a display of wild weather, noting a ‘water spout’ descending from the clouds over Boston during a rain storm.
      • But green-fingered Mrs Ashworth says she has hit upon an idea to outsmart any more wild weather heading her way.
      • This is a reward you often get, here on the edge of Exmoor, with wild skies making up for a day of wild weather.
      • Mt Hotham had two inches of rain on the weekend, followed by wild weather full of hailstorms overnight.
      • As a result, some of the Earth's weather systems start to shut down rapidly and the world begins to suffer from wild weather conditions never experienced before.
      • And therefore, Brisbane's wild weather and storms will not last for another six weeks!
      • Slowed me down and let me enjoy the wild weather, a big pile of grey storm clouds, a sunny battle of summer rain and sunshine and light shards slicing clouds.
      Synonyms
      stormy, squally, tempestuous, turbulent, blustery, windy, howling, raging, roaring, furious, violent
      angry, dirty, foul, nasty, inclement
      rough, storm-tossed, choppy, boiling
      rare boisterous
    2. 2.2 (of people) not civilized; primitive.
      (人)未开化的,野蛮的,原始的
      the wild tribes from the north

      北边来的原始部落。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • However, among the once wild head-hunting tribes of northeastern India cattle are raised for food.
      • Her haunting novel is based on journals kept by the French doctor recording his attempts to civilise a wild child who has been captured by huntsmen after living alone for years in the woods.
      • But while the colonial powers cast the rebels in the light of wild savages destroying the civilising force of the settlers, it was Africans who suffered the brunt of attacks.
      • For Derricke's final image is actually an idea, his dream of the successful civilization of the wild Irish.
      • It could no longer be represented by such straightforward dualities as European versus native, or civilised versus wild.
      • Egypt, Donnelly wrote, was their colony, where they tried to civilize wild tribes.
      • Some wild tribes of the distant past no doubt did follow the practice of killing innocent people in revenge for the death of one of their men.
      • Furthermore, Brillat-Savarin recognises that obesity does not exist among wild tribes who need physical exercise to get their daily nutrition.
      • To think how Man developed from the wild tribes 7000 years ago to this level today.
      • She expressed her hope that her gifted nephew would be an emissary of civilization to the wild colonies.
      • The Wall was built by the Romans to keep out the wild Caledonian tribes from the North.
      Synonyms
      primitive, uncivilized, uncultured, uncultivated, uneducated, ignorant
      savage, barbarous, barbaric, brutish, ferocious, fierce
      Indian jungli
      archaic rude
    3. 2.3 (of a look, appearance, etc.) indicating distraction or strong emotion.
      (表情、外表等)走神的,不专注的
      her wild eyes were darting back and forth

      她失魂落魄的目光一会投向这一会投向那。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Mr. Asa's face was ruddy, his veined cheeks shiny with more than sweat, and he had a wild look to his eyes, like Pop did the time a rattler sunk fangs into his best hound.
      • She turns to face Brabham, trembling but ready to fight if she needs to, a wild look of fear in her eyes.
      • Nancy threw her a wild look, trying to make sense of it all.
      • Having been alone in a room for the better part of a year, I emerged into the world of festivals and bookshops with a wild look in my eyes.
      • There was always a wild look lurking in Balder's eyes.
      • She had this wild look in her eyes, completely lost.
      • She was a mess though - smudged and bruised, blue with cold, and with a wild look in her eye.
      • And there was always that same wild look, that same wacky glint in her eyes.
      • She had a wild look in her eyes and her face was all twisted up in excitement.
      • History records that Paganini stunned audiences with his playing and wild looks, further reinforcing the myth that he had made a pact with the Devil in return for such talent.
      • Lord Burtoll had never seen the wild looks on the other girl's faces; he didn't know how popular such tales and antics had made Madia.
      • You could see the home fans get a wild look in their eye as naked drummers ran up and down the sidelines riding stick-horses and chanting in the rain.
      • There was a pleading in her voice, a wild look of hope in her eyes.
      • His struggles were becoming more and more frenzied, a wild look creeping into his blue eyes.
      • My hair was knotted in a tangled mess, giving me a wild look.
      • When he turned to look up at her, it was with a wild look, a hope so anxious it almost hurt her to see it.
      • Geniuses must have a wild look, their hair must be in disarray, their mind must be in torment on account of their receptivity to divine afflatus, which comes in via the hair.
      • A wild look was in her eyes as she stared at the dying fire.
      • Which reminded me… I made my hair sleekly curly, as opposed to the wild look it usually had.
      • A wild look of joy gradually spread across her face.
  • 3Lacking discipline or restraint.

    wild parties were never her scene
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Upon moving in, the duchess became famous for her wild parties.
    • ‘They have a wild party but something goes wrong,’ says Welsh, refusing to divulge the secret at the heart of the plot.
    • I still go to wild parties - only they're at Wacky Warehouse and the guest list is made up of screaming five-year-olds.
    • The mother had jokingly advised her not to go to any wild parties or get bitten on the leg by a scorpion.
    • Sure, they enhanced his ‘cool,’ but you had to wonder if they were hiding some telltale sign of age or too many wild parties.
    Synonyms
    uncontrolled, unrestrained, out of control, undisciplined, unconstrained, uncurbed, unbridled, unchecked, chaotic
    uninhibited, extrovert, attention-seeking, unconventional
    wayward, self-willed, ungovernable, unmanageable, unruly, rowdy, disorderly, riotous, lawless
    rare corybantic
    1. 3.1informal Very enthusiastic or excited.
      〈非正式〉狂热的;极为激动的
      I'm not wild about the music

      我对这种音乐并不狂热。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • He's arrived in Boston to address the wild, enthusiastic, over-the-top Democratic Convention.
      • Henry wants me to try this Vietnamese place he's wild about. Want to come?
      • Liz, on the other hand, has strong cultural and familial restrictions on staring, and tends to look very mildly upon people, when she looks at all, even when she's standing in front of a man she's wild about.
      Synonyms
      very excited, jumping up and down, on fire, delirious, in a frenzy, frantic
      uproarious, tumultuous, passionate, vehement, eager, unrestrained, untrammelled
      very keen on, very enthusiastic about, passionate about, enamoured of, infatuated with, smitten with
      informal crazy about, mad about, nutty/nuts about, potty about, gone on
    2. 3.2informal Very angry.
      〈非正式〉愤怒的
      Example sentencesExamples
      • She was wild. She just flipped. It was as if she had voices in her head.
      Synonyms
      furious, very angry, infuriated, incensed, enraged, beside oneself, irate, fuming, in a rage, raging, seething, maddened, exasperated
      informal livid, mad, hopping mad, seeing red, hot under the collar, up in arms, foaming at the mouth, on the warpath, steamed up, fit to be tied
      British informal spare
      Scottish informal radge
  • 4Not based on sound reasoning or probability.

    a wild guess

    胡乱猜测。

    wild rumours were circulating
    performing in Hollywood was beyond my wildest dreams
    who, even in their wildest dreams, could have anticipated such a victory?

    再异想天开,谁能想到会取得这样一个大胜利?

    Example sentencesExamples
    • For many months, racing has been the subject of wild rumours and unsubstantiated allegations, much of them nonsense and most thoroughly offensive.
    • While the team performed in office, others plotted against them, filling the air with harmful rumours and wild allegations.
    • We'll make wild guesses for a while and then, if all else fails, we'll open this envelope that has all the answers.
    • At least with Santa Claus, we know there really was a Saint Nicholas on whom all the later wild stories are based.
    • If this sounds like wild speculation, recall that it has in fact been standard political practice since the time of Machiavelli.
    • That was only a wild guess, but what they did know for sure was that such a strange affliction had to be segregated from normal society.
    • I'll make a wild guess that around 99% of boys my age play computer games.
    • The element of luck was also at play with one of the quarter finalists making a wild guess on the number of flowers that goes on to make a kilogram of Saffron.
    • ‘It lays to rest some of the wild rumours that have been circulating which have been unhelpful and distressing for the families,’ he said.
    • As long as I'm toasting Keller based on wild speculation, let me tip my glass to Risen.
    • After all, if speculation is based on concrete facts and is not just a wild guess, it's part of science.
    • But times are fresh and proof is mostly based on wild innuendo and moral snobbery in these dawn days of post-America.
    • At first, the open news reporting helped to correct wild rumours which were being spread in the absence of adequate official information.
    • Although there are millions of pages of material on the web, it's an uncharted frontier of rumour, speculation, wild theories and baseless postulation.
    • Still, ‘real reporters’ have dissed him for reporting wild rumours and trafficking in gossip.
    • These are the latest of wild rumours about the band leader who died when his plane crashed into the English Channel on the way to Paris in December 1944.
    • Psychopharmacology has discovered the truth in Scott's wild guess, but Zelda is not the only hectored patient who might have been cured had she been born later.
    • To quash rumours and wild speculation on the internet, he declared his bisexuality in US magazine Out, appearing naked on the cover just to make sure the whole world noticed.
    • These figures are no more than wild guesses and not derived from research or sound information.
    • Also contributing to the entertainment quota during the show were the quiz-master's rejoinders to the wild guesses that almost every team was indulging in.
    Synonyms
    madcap, ridiculous, ludicrous, foolish, stupid, lunatic, foolhardy, idiotic, absurd, silly, asinine, unwise, ill-advised, ill-considered, ill-conceived, illogical, senseless, nonsensical
    impractical, impracticable, unpractical, unworkable, imprudent, reckless, preposterous, outrageous
    extravagant, fantastical, fantastic, fanciful
    informal crazy, crackpot, crackbrained, cock-eyed
    British informal daft
    random, arbitrary, hit-or-miss, haphazard, uninformed
    informal shot-in-the-dark
  • 5(of a playing card) deemed to have any value, suit, colour, or other property in a game at the discretion of the player holding it.

    (牌)百搭的。参见WILD CARD

    See also wild card
    Example sentencesExamples
    • In some games certain cards are wild - either the deuces or a joker added to the deck - and in some games there is a cumulative jackpot which is won by a high hand such as a royal flush.
    • Unlike normal wild cards and other wild draw cards, the player who played the draw two card does not get to specify the next color/suit.
    • In this game, twos and jokers are wild, and threes are special.
    • A player uses the wild double in his turn to end the gameround.
    • In this case each hand the wild tiles move around the board from player to player so each player gets 2 wild tiles every 3rd hand.
noun wʌɪldwaɪld
the wild
  • 1A natural state or uncultivated or uninhabited region.

    天然状态;未开垦地区;蛮荒之地;荒地

    kiwis are virtually extinct in the wild

    鹬鸵在野外几乎灭绝了。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • They are attempting to track it across Sheffield and are calling on gardeners and countryside enthusiasts to report if they have it in their garden or have seen it recently in the wild.
    • It had been 36 years since one been seen in the wild.
    • Thanks to captive breeding, today there are over 300 whooping cranes, with 180 living in the wild.
    • Our data suggest that the performance paradigm can be expanded to reveal more of the physiological underpinning of natural selection in the wild.
    • Zoos often keep their animals in cramped, often barren conditions: a far cry from the animal's natural habitat in the wild.
    • In the South, numbers have increased in the wild.
    • There are only about 650 mountain gorillas left in the wild.
    • By the way, the chinchilla is almost extinct in the wild.
    • And it loses - it's like the condors that they release in the wild.
    • If so, does a fish have a worse time of it in a net than it will have when it is killed by a predator or dies of other natural causes in the wild?
    • However, the ideal places for establishing bee colonies were locations where the farm pesticide use was low, and where there were several beehives in the wild.
    • There is no doubt that a number of important medicinal herbs and animals used in the production of natural medicines are endangered in the wild.
    • There are now fewer than 30,000 orang-utans, and it is likely that they will become extinct in the wild in as little as 20 years' time if this decline continues.
    • A rare sea eagle chick which was rescued from a nest after its father was poisoned has been successfully fostered in the wild by surrogate parents in the first case of its kind in Scotland.
    • Conversely, it is well known that cracids can hybridize very easily in captivity, though natural hybridization has not been reported in the wild.
    • For instance, we know that apes ‘communicate’ in the wild.
    • They say it is too expensive and say protecting southwest China's mountain forests is a better way to save the 1,000 pandas left in the wild.
    • He's done well to survive in the wild for so long, although he might have been taken in by a family for a while.
    • I can understand people's concerns about animals such as wolves, but as anyone who has worked with them in the wild will tell you, they don't represent a threat to humans.
    • Breeding pandas is a tricky business, even in the wild.
    1. 1.1the wilds A remote uninhabited or sparsely inhabited area.
      偏僻地区,穷乡僻壤
      he spent a year in the wilds of Canada

      他在加拿大的穷乡僻壤过了一年。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • And third is the physical journey Sun makes, tracing the footsteps of Xuanzang, through the wilds of Central Asia and the sacred places of Buddhism.
      • Indulge your weakness for romantic clichés by taking your significant other for a canoe ride on the Glenmore Reservoir or into the wilds of the adjacent Weaselhead area.
      • No Charlton game today, so I'm heading off to the wilds of Surrey for a change of scene.
      • I'm escaping to the wilds of the Peak District tomorrow for a couple of days.
      • After successfully moving our business to the wilds of the Oregon outback I've had a chance to use some new equipment and thought I'd share what I learned.
      • The local bus from Kyle of Lochalsh whizzes its way, as it does every day, through the wilds of Skye towards Portree.
      • Some of Kenya's bush homes also offer camel safaris up into the wilds of the far north.
      • Yet rhodos have grown in the wilds of the world for thousands of years without chemical fertilizer, bloom booster, weevil killer, soil acidifier or any other manner of nasty toxin.
      • Follow our writers to the most remote hideaways on earth, from the Sahara to the wilds of Scotland
      • So anyway, I'm headed out of town for the next twelve days, to Salt Lake City and then the wilds of Wyoming's Wind Rivers region for some backpacking.
      • So occasionally it is necessary to try to overcome the sense of being institutionalised by well-paved roads and street lighting and delve into the wilds of Oxfordshire.
      • Schooler is a commercial fishermen and wilderness guide who makes a living in the wilds of Alaska.
      • It is located far from Oxbridge, amidst James's own native grounds: the wilds of the bleak East Anglian seacoast.
      • It's well written with lots of excellent photographs and is packed full of knowledge gained from her many years working as a trout-fishing guide in the wilds of the Caithness area of Scotland.
      • This section ranges across the central area of England, from the wilds of the Peak District via the industrialised Black Country to the idyll of the Cotswolds.
      • He made his home in the wilds of the Blackstairs on the Wexford side, away from his home in Carlow.
      • Francis came all the way back into the big bad city from the wilds of New Haven, so we were glad to see him.
      • Weather conditions are set to improve by Thursday, and pilots will take advantage, taking-off and climbing in thermals into the wilds of the high Alpine back country.
      • It must have been a tough decision to be tucked away in the wilds of the remote village after a degree from Oxford but he obviously has a lot of the hardy Scot in him, as his occasional hints keep reminding us.
      • Patterson had grown up in the wilds of Minnesota.
      Synonyms
      remote areas, wilderness
      backwoods, hinterlands
      North American backcountry, backland
      Australian/New Zealand outback, bush, backblocks, booay
      South African backveld, platteland
      North American informal boondocks, boonies, tall timbers
      Australian/New Zealand informal Woop Woop, beyond the black stump
verb wʌɪldwaɪld
[with object]West Indian
  • Treat (a person or animal) harshly, so that they become untrusting or nervous.

    〈西印度〉野蛮对待;残酷对待

    let your pigeon fly for a while: we don't want to wild him

Phrases

  • run wild

    • Grow or develop without restraint or discipline.

      (动植物,人)疯狂生长;变野蛮;变粗暴;失去控制(约束)

      these horses have been running wild since they were born

      这些马自出生以来一直缺乏驯化。

      figurative her imagination had run wild

      〈喻〉她让自己的想象力自由驰骋。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • It's a question of striking the right balance: too little discipline and teenagers might run wild; too much and they might rebel.
      • Before your emotions run wild with your imagination, remember that you can't believe everything you hear.
      • Without facts, there is nothing to stop imaginations running wild.
      • I mean, that's just someone's imagination running wild.
      • It opens with a young boy in his room, imagination running wild, like any kid's does, thinking there is something in the shadows waiting to get him.
      • Let your imagination run wild and your taste buds take over.
      • But urban front gardens are undoubtedly small, so letting the imagination run wild is best saved for the tranquillity and calm of the back garden.
      • Strange and romantic experiences are in the offing, and you may even gain through a love affair, so let your imagination run wild.
      • Presumably he's hoping to let the island monkeys run wild, grow a fanbase around him and then start charging them for his signature too.
      • This, of course, is the way rumors begin - with whispering and secrets and imaginations running wild.
      Synonyms
      grow unchecked, grow profusely, run riot, spread like wildfire, ramble, straggle
      run free, run amok, run riot, get out of control, cut loose, be undisciplined, go on the rampage
  • wild horses wouldn't ——

    • Used to convey that nothing could persuade or force one to do something.

      wild horses wouldn't have kept me away
      Example sentencesExamples
      • I don't know where he gets it from because wild horses wouldn't drag me onto a stage.
      • Well, a pack of wild horses wouldn't have got Angela out of the Sari Club - all the attention she was getting.
      • Even though I'll be in Birmingham on Saturday (Aston Villa v Charlton), wild horses wouldn't drag me away from some of these places on Sunday.
      • He assured friends that wild horses wouldn't drag him back to the Lords when he stepped down as Archbishop of York last weekend.
  • wild and woolly

    • Uncouth in appearance or behaviour.

      粗野的,野蛮的

      the Australian outlaw's wild and woolly look
      he might have been a gunman in his wild and woolly youth
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Prayer to saints specifically unites us with the Church Triumphant in heaven, and thus is a much-needed reminder that the Church has endured for almost 2,000 wild and woolly and often hideous years.
      • The Government does not actually need the money, but because it has the money coming in, it comes up with all sorts of wild and woolly ways of spending it.
      • On the wild and woolly streets of Russia's capital city, the diesel engine is truly a menace to human health.
      • The Point Reyes peninsula is as wild and woolly as it gets, yet it's conveniently close - roughly 35 miles - to the hubbub of San Francisco.
      • And yet they both deal with the wild and woolly world of human behaviour.
      • But given the wild and woolly wholesale market in the past three years, analyzing risk has been getting more difficult.
      • Such is the wild and woolly insurance market in China today.
      • Things will be much less wild and woolly here tomorrow, so I will be back then with a statement of principle.
      • It was among the Vikings, however, that wild and woolly culture of the North Atlantic (today's Norway and Denmark), that mead really came into its own.
      • Labor Council's walking labour history museum is back with more wild and woolly facts from the wonderful world of workplace relations.

Derivatives

  • wildish

  • adjective

Origin

Old English wilde, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch and German wild.

  • Both wild and wilderness are Old English words. The first sense of wild was ‘not tame or domesticated’, and wilderness means literally ‘land inhabited only by wild animals’—it comes from Old English wild dēor ‘wild deer’. This is the sense in The Call of the Wild (1903), a novella by the American writer Jack London about a pet sold as a sled dog that returns to the wild to lead a pack of wolves. To the Anglo-Saxons wildfire was originally a raging, destructive fire caused by a lightning strike. It was also a mixture of highly flammable substances used in warfare, and a term for various skin diseases that spread quickly over the body. Use of spread like wildfire was suggested by Shakespeare's line in his poem The Rape of Lucrece: ‘Whose words like wild fire burnt the shining glorie / Of rich-built Illion [Troy]’. A wild goose chase does not come from hunting. Early examples, dating from the late 16th century, refer to a popular sport of the time in which each of a line of riders had to follow accurately the course of the leader, like a flight of wild geese. The wooded uplands know as wolds (Old English), as in Cotswolds, or wealds are probably from the same root. See also deer, voice, west, wool

Rhymes

child, Childe, mild, self-styled, undefiled, Wilde

Definition of wild in US English:

wild

adjectivewīldwaɪld
  • 1(of an animal or plant) living or growing in the natural environment; not domesticated or cultivated.

    (动植物)野的;野生的;未栽培的;未驯化的

    a herd of wild goats
    wild strawberries
    Example sentencesExamples
    • When mist fills the Himalayan valleys and heavy monsoon rain sweeps across the hills, it is natural for the wild creatures to seek shelter.
    • But it was not too hard to do this at this time of year when wild grass grew abundantly in the fields.
    • We enjoy long walks on the trails searching for the perfect walking stick, tracking deer, wild pigs and other animals.
    • Another of the joys of the Inca Trail and Machu Picchu are the wild orchids that grow, although now in decreasing numbers as tourists pick them.
    • Natural growths of wild grass of a different species were pollinated by the gene-modified grass nearly nine miles away.
    • All around us the wild grasses are growing, heavy with seeds not yet ripened.
    • Avian flu is naturally present in wild birds and can easily spread to poultry.
    • They also enjoyed the tales given by Michael on the history and folklore of the area and learned a great deal about the wild herbs and flowers growing there.
    • Like its cultivated successors, the wild vine is a climbing plant which needs to grow up some support.
    • The red-brick mansion looks shabby with parts of it damaged and wild bushes growing around it.
    • A true hunter is concerned with propagating natural, wild species while harvesting a few for the table.
    • The domestic apple, a hybrid of several wild species, is grown extensively in cool temperate regions of the world.
    • The steady economic development has caused residences and public infrastructures to grow like wild grass.
    • The hearths contained burnt animal bone, including wild pig, fox, bird, either a dog or a wolf, and possibly a bear.
    • Or they can do what Kiwis do best: tramp along the ten-mile Moeraki Valley trail system, where wild orchids grow.
    • The verges have grown profuse with wild grasses and flowers.
    • The only noise that came to me was from the soles of my boots brushing against the wild grass growing on the weathered road.
    • All the sunflowers that were planted last summer were brown, wild shrubs grew abundantly, and weeds consumed the few lilies that were trying desperately to live.
    • Dragons eat any animals they can catch, up to the size of wild pigs, goats, deer, and water buffaloes and occasionally including human beings.
    • Trees are cut down to grow cash crops and wild creatures are shot.
    Synonyms
    untamed, undomesticated, feral
    uncultivated, natural
    1. 1.1 Produced from wild animals or plants without cultivation.
      产自野生动植物的
      wild honey

      野生天然蜂蜜。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • For £150 a year, anyone can adopt a sheep and in return be sent four kilos of pecorino, wild honey, jams and some woollen jumpers.
      • The smell is of locusts and wild honey, like John the Baptist's menu.
      • There are some women's units making excellent bath soaps by adding exotic ingredients like honey, saffron, wild turmeric or sandal.
      • As far as the commercial growers were concerned the man used strains which were almost wild.
      • Insects or their by-products such as honey are another form of wild food.
  • 2(of a place or region) uninhabited, uncultivated, or inhospitable.

    an expanse of wild moorland
    the wild coastline of Cape Wrath

    拉斯角荒芜的海岸线。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I think that instilled a love for landscape, for wild places and open spaces.
    • Like most mountaineers, he felt alive in high, wild places.
    • People can move to new places and be happy again but wild habitats and heritage site cannot be moved and once destroyed cannot be restored.
    • When I was fortunate enough to find a good job in Perth in 1975 I was eager to return and revisit those beautiful, wild places I had known as a child.
    • A majority of people agree that there should be large tracts of wild places kept aside that belong to no one person but where any of us can go.
    • But underneath the glossy picture postcard image is a harsh, rugged, wild landscape that is my main source of inspiration.
    • It is always so surprising to arrive at a populated town after travelling through such uninhabitable, wild terrain.
    • Quite how the developer thinks this remote area, that is only penetrated by one minor road, is not a wild place beggars belief.
    • David was lauded for his work by being promoted to BBC Director of Programs, but he missed his field trips to wild places and asked that occasionally he be allowed out of his suit.
    • Despite our predilection for the world's wild places, Sara and I also enjoy a little culture now and again.
    • Only by visiting such places will we learn to appreciate our country's wildlife and wild places.
    • The land was wild and empty, but there always seemed to be a human shape lurking in the tunnels.
    • Families, organisations and schools are being urged to take part in a new award for Cumbria which aims to encourage people of all ages to discover and conserve wild places.
    • Explore, enjoy and protect the wild places of the earth.
    • And population pressures are causing heavy damage to the world's remaining wild places.
    • But he wrote about a kind of decaying Britain; about towns and suburbs and rolling countryside more often than wild places.
    • Clearly his is a cack-handed attempt to cash in on the growing public desire to take wild places into the ownership and control of the communities that live around them.
    • Fred had a warm and generous nature, coloured by a certain eccentricity, and he loved the wild places of the world.
    • I reckon my love of nature and of wild places started out with Romany.
    • More of the world's wild places have been destroyed and millions of people have suffered from extreme weather events.
    Synonyms
    uninhabited, unpopulated, uncultivated, unfarmed, unmanaged, virgin
    1. 2.1 (of sea or the weather) rough and stormy.
      a wild, bitterly cold night
      Example sentencesExamples
      • As a result, some of the Earth's weather systems start to shut down rapidly and the world begins to suffer from wild weather conditions never experienced before.
      • This is a reward you often get, here on the edge of Exmoor, with wild skies making up for a day of wild weather.
      • But green-fingered Mrs Ashworth says she has hit upon an idea to outsmart any more wild weather heading her way.
      • Slowed me down and let me enjoy the wild weather, a big pile of grey storm clouds, a sunny battle of summer rain and sunshine and light shards slicing clouds.
      • There's something primal and deeply satisfying about sitting indoors, all warm and snug and listening to wild weather beating at the eaves.
      • These trends are bound to continue into 2001, with more people around the world being displaced by floods, endangered by wild weather and starved by droughts.
      • It is a shrub, rather than a tree, and its size will be limited on the crags because of the wild weather conditions it has to endure.
      • Much of the Midwest is on alert tonight for severe storms after a weekend of wild weather.
      • The titles were decimated due to the wild weather conditions with many events cancelled.
      • And therefore, Brisbane's wild weather and storms will not last for another six weeks!
      • Police have warned boat enthusiasts to be cautious during wild weather, after a dramatic rescue on the River Derwent yesterday.
      • Also tonight, wild weather in the west as major Pacific storms pour down on already saturated areas.
      • The fact that this meant taking a ship with a dodgy condenser round Scotland through the wild seas of January doesn't seem to have worried anybody.
      • For me the wild seas and the cold were really tough.
      • A few days back I thrilled to a display of wild weather, noting a ‘water spout’ descending from the clouds over Boston during a rain storm.
      • In the event, only one cup game and four in lower divisions survived the wild weather.
      • Mt Hotham had two inches of rain on the weekend, followed by wild weather full of hailstorms overnight.
      • The 19-ton vessel worked much of New Zealand's west coast, pounding through wild seas.
      • Overhead a rogue seagull stands on the wind, silent, but a sign there's wild weather on the way.
      • Presumably the fact that Scots are accustomed to wild weather helps.
      Synonyms
      stormy, squally, tempestuous, turbulent, blustery, windy, howling, raging, roaring, furious, violent
    2. 2.2 (of people) not civilized; primitive.
      (人)未开化的,野蛮的,原始的
      the wild tribes from the north

      北边来的原始部落。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Egypt, Donnelly wrote, was their colony, where they tried to civilize wild tribes.
      • To think how Man developed from the wild tribes 7000 years ago to this level today.
      • Her haunting novel is based on journals kept by the French doctor recording his attempts to civilise a wild child who has been captured by huntsmen after living alone for years in the woods.
      • Some wild tribes of the distant past no doubt did follow the practice of killing innocent people in revenge for the death of one of their men.
      • She expressed her hope that her gifted nephew would be an emissary of civilization to the wild colonies.
      • Furthermore, Brillat-Savarin recognises that obesity does not exist among wild tribes who need physical exercise to get their daily nutrition.
      • But while the colonial powers cast the rebels in the light of wild savages destroying the civilising force of the settlers, it was Africans who suffered the brunt of attacks.
      • For Derricke's final image is actually an idea, his dream of the successful civilization of the wild Irish.
      • The Wall was built by the Romans to keep out the wild Caledonian tribes from the North.
      • It could no longer be represented by such straightforward dualities as European versus native, or civilised versus wild.
      • However, among the once wild head-hunting tribes of northeastern India cattle are raised for food.
      Synonyms
      primitive, uncivilized, uncultured, uncultivated, uneducated, ignorant
    3. 2.3 (of a look, appearance, etc.) indicating distraction or strong emotion.
      (表情、外表等)走神的,不专注的
      her wild eyes were darting back and forth

      她失魂落魄的目光一会投向这一会投向那。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • She had this wild look in her eyes, completely lost.
      • And there was always that same wild look, that same wacky glint in her eyes.
      • My hair was knotted in a tangled mess, giving me a wild look.
      • Having been alone in a room for the better part of a year, I emerged into the world of festivals and bookshops with a wild look in my eyes.
      • Lord Burtoll had never seen the wild looks on the other girl's faces; he didn't know how popular such tales and antics had made Madia.
      • When he turned to look up at her, it was with a wild look, a hope so anxious it almost hurt her to see it.
      • She had a wild look in her eyes and her face was all twisted up in excitement.
      • A wild look of joy gradually spread across her face.
      • A wild look was in her eyes as she stared at the dying fire.
      • There was a pleading in her voice, a wild look of hope in her eyes.
      • Geniuses must have a wild look, their hair must be in disarray, their mind must be in torment on account of their receptivity to divine afflatus, which comes in via the hair.
      • His struggles were becoming more and more frenzied, a wild look creeping into his blue eyes.
      • Mr. Asa's face was ruddy, his veined cheeks shiny with more than sweat, and he had a wild look to his eyes, like Pop did the time a rattler sunk fangs into his best hound.
      • She was a mess though - smudged and bruised, blue with cold, and with a wild look in her eye.
      • There was always a wild look lurking in Balder's eyes.
      • Nancy threw her a wild look, trying to make sense of it all.
      • History records that Paganini stunned audiences with his playing and wild looks, further reinforcing the myth that he had made a pact with the Devil in return for such talent.
      • You could see the home fans get a wild look in their eye as naked drummers ran up and down the sidelines riding stick-horses and chanting in the rain.
      • Which reminded me… I made my hair sleekly curly, as opposed to the wild look it usually had.
      • She turns to face Brabham, trembling but ready to fight if she needs to, a wild look of fear in her eyes.
  • 3Lacking discipline or restraint.

    wild parties were never her scene
    Example sentencesExamples
    • I still go to wild parties - only they're at Wacky Warehouse and the guest list is made up of screaming five-year-olds.
    • ‘They have a wild party but something goes wrong,’ says Welsh, refusing to divulge the secret at the heart of the plot.
    • Sure, they enhanced his ‘cool,’ but you had to wonder if they were hiding some telltale sign of age or too many wild parties.
    • The mother had jokingly advised her not to go to any wild parties or get bitten on the leg by a scorpion.
    • Upon moving in, the duchess became famous for her wild parties.
    Synonyms
    uncontrolled, unrestrained, out of control, undisciplined, unconstrained, uncurbed, unbridled, unchecked, chaotic
    1. 3.1informal Very enthusiastic or excited.
      〈非正式〉狂热的;极为激动的
      I'm not wild about the music

      我对这种音乐并不狂热。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • He's arrived in Boston to address the wild, enthusiastic, over-the-top Democratic Convention.
      • Henry wants me to try this Vietnamese place he's wild about. Want to come?
      • Liz, on the other hand, has strong cultural and familial restrictions on staring, and tends to look very mildly upon people, when she looks at all, even when she's standing in front of a man she's wild about.
      Synonyms
      very excited, jumping up and down, on fire, delirious, in a frenzy, frantic
      very keen on, very enthusiastic about, passionate about, enamoured of, infatuated with, smitten with
    2. 3.2informal Very angry.
      〈非正式〉愤怒的
      Example sentencesExamples
      • She was wild. She just flipped. It was as if she had voices in her head.
      Synonyms
      furious, very angry, infuriated, incensed, enraged, beside oneself, irate, fuming, in a rage, raging, seething, maddened, exasperated
  • 4Not based on sound reasoning or probability.

    a wild guess

    胡乱猜测。

    wild rumors were circulating
    performing in Hollywood was beyond my wildest dreams
    who, even in their wildest dreams, could have anticipated such a victory?

    再异想天开,谁能想到会取得这样一个大胜利?

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Although there are millions of pages of material on the web, it's an uncharted frontier of rumour, speculation, wild theories and baseless postulation.
    • Psychopharmacology has discovered the truth in Scott's wild guess, but Zelda is not the only hectored patient who might have been cured had she been born later.
    • ‘It lays to rest some of the wild rumours that have been circulating which have been unhelpful and distressing for the families,’ he said.
    • While the team performed in office, others plotted against them, filling the air with harmful rumours and wild allegations.
    • We'll make wild guesses for a while and then, if all else fails, we'll open this envelope that has all the answers.
    • At first, the open news reporting helped to correct wild rumours which were being spread in the absence of adequate official information.
    • I'll make a wild guess that around 99% of boys my age play computer games.
    • Also contributing to the entertainment quota during the show were the quiz-master's rejoinders to the wild guesses that almost every team was indulging in.
    • For many months, racing has been the subject of wild rumours and unsubstantiated allegations, much of them nonsense and most thoroughly offensive.
    • These figures are no more than wild guesses and not derived from research or sound information.
    • These are the latest of wild rumours about the band leader who died when his plane crashed into the English Channel on the way to Paris in December 1944.
    • That was only a wild guess, but what they did know for sure was that such a strange affliction had to be segregated from normal society.
    • To quash rumours and wild speculation on the internet, he declared his bisexuality in US magazine Out, appearing naked on the cover just to make sure the whole world noticed.
    • After all, if speculation is based on concrete facts and is not just a wild guess, it's part of science.
    • As long as I'm toasting Keller based on wild speculation, let me tip my glass to Risen.
    • At least with Santa Claus, we know there really was a Saint Nicholas on whom all the later wild stories are based.
    • The element of luck was also at play with one of the quarter finalists making a wild guess on the number of flowers that goes on to make a kilogram of Saffron.
    • If this sounds like wild speculation, recall that it has in fact been standard political practice since the time of Machiavelli.
    • But times are fresh and proof is mostly based on wild innuendo and moral snobbery in these dawn days of post-America.
    • Still, ‘real reporters’ have dissed him for reporting wild rumours and trafficking in gossip.
    Synonyms
    madcap, ridiculous, ludicrous, foolish, stupid, lunatic, foolhardy, idiotic, absurd, silly, asinine, unwise, ill-advised, ill-considered, ill-conceived, illogical, senseless, nonsensical
    random, arbitrary, hit-or-miss, haphazard, uninformed
  • 5(of a playing card) deemed to have any value, suit, color, or other property in a game at the discretion of the player holding it.

    (牌)百搭的。参见WILD CARD

    See also wild card
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Unlike normal wild cards and other wild draw cards, the player who played the draw two card does not get to specify the next color/suit.
    • In this case each hand the wild tiles move around the board from player to player so each player gets 2 wild tiles every 3rd hand.
    • In some games certain cards are wild - either the deuces or a joker added to the deck - and in some games there is a cumulative jackpot which is won by a high hand such as a royal flush.
    • A player uses the wild double in his turn to end the gameround.
    • In this game, twos and jokers are wild, and threes are special.
nounwīldwaɪld
the wild
  • 1A natural state or uncultivated or uninhabited region.

    天然状态;未开垦地区;蛮荒之地;荒地

    kiwis are virtually extinct in the wild

    鹬鸵在野外几乎灭绝了。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • In the South, numbers have increased in the wild.
    • They say it is too expensive and say protecting southwest China's mountain forests is a better way to save the 1,000 pandas left in the wild.
    • He's done well to survive in the wild for so long, although he might have been taken in by a family for a while.
    • Breeding pandas is a tricky business, even in the wild.
    • However, the ideal places for establishing bee colonies were locations where the farm pesticide use was low, and where there were several beehives in the wild.
    • Thanks to captive breeding, today there are over 300 whooping cranes, with 180 living in the wild.
    • A rare sea eagle chick which was rescued from a nest after its father was poisoned has been successfully fostered in the wild by surrogate parents in the first case of its kind in Scotland.
    • There is no doubt that a number of important medicinal herbs and animals used in the production of natural medicines are endangered in the wild.
    • There are only about 650 mountain gorillas left in the wild.
    • Zoos often keep their animals in cramped, often barren conditions: a far cry from the animal's natural habitat in the wild.
    • For instance, we know that apes ‘communicate’ in the wild.
    • And it loses - it's like the condors that they release in the wild.
    • There are now fewer than 30,000 orang-utans, and it is likely that they will become extinct in the wild in as little as 20 years' time if this decline continues.
    • It had been 36 years since one been seen in the wild.
    • I can understand people's concerns about animals such as wolves, but as anyone who has worked with them in the wild will tell you, they don't represent a threat to humans.
    • They are attempting to track it across Sheffield and are calling on gardeners and countryside enthusiasts to report if they have it in their garden or have seen it recently in the wild.
    • Our data suggest that the performance paradigm can be expanded to reveal more of the physiological underpinning of natural selection in the wild.
    • If so, does a fish have a worse time of it in a net than it will have when it is killed by a predator or dies of other natural causes in the wild?
    • By the way, the chinchilla is almost extinct in the wild.
    • Conversely, it is well known that cracids can hybridize very easily in captivity, though natural hybridization has not been reported in the wild.
    1. 1.1the wilds A remote uninhabited or sparsely inhabited area.
      偏僻地区,穷乡僻壤
      he spent a year in the wilds of Canada

      他在加拿大的穷乡僻壤过了一年。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • And third is the physical journey Sun makes, tracing the footsteps of Xuanzang, through the wilds of Central Asia and the sacred places of Buddhism.
      • It's well written with lots of excellent photographs and is packed full of knowledge gained from her many years working as a trout-fishing guide in the wilds of the Caithness area of Scotland.
      • It is located far from Oxbridge, amidst James's own native grounds: the wilds of the bleak East Anglian seacoast.
      • Francis came all the way back into the big bad city from the wilds of New Haven, so we were glad to see him.
      • Patterson had grown up in the wilds of Minnesota.
      • No Charlton game today, so I'm heading off to the wilds of Surrey for a change of scene.
      • It must have been a tough decision to be tucked away in the wilds of the remote village after a degree from Oxford but he obviously has a lot of the hardy Scot in him, as his occasional hints keep reminding us.
      • Follow our writers to the most remote hideaways on earth, from the Sahara to the wilds of Scotland
      • After successfully moving our business to the wilds of the Oregon outback I've had a chance to use some new equipment and thought I'd share what I learned.
      • This section ranges across the central area of England, from the wilds of the Peak District via the industrialised Black Country to the idyll of the Cotswolds.
      • Indulge your weakness for romantic clichés by taking your significant other for a canoe ride on the Glenmore Reservoir or into the wilds of the adjacent Weaselhead area.
      • Yet rhodos have grown in the wilds of the world for thousands of years without chemical fertilizer, bloom booster, weevil killer, soil acidifier or any other manner of nasty toxin.
      • So anyway, I'm headed out of town for the next twelve days, to Salt Lake City and then the wilds of Wyoming's Wind Rivers region for some backpacking.
      • Weather conditions are set to improve by Thursday, and pilots will take advantage, taking-off and climbing in thermals into the wilds of the high Alpine back country.
      • Schooler is a commercial fishermen and wilderness guide who makes a living in the wilds of Alaska.
      • He made his home in the wilds of the Blackstairs on the Wexford side, away from his home in Carlow.
      • The local bus from Kyle of Lochalsh whizzes its way, as it does every day, through the wilds of Skye towards Portree.
      • Some of Kenya's bush homes also offer camel safaris up into the wilds of the far north.
      • I'm escaping to the wilds of the Peak District tomorrow for a couple of days.
      • So occasionally it is necessary to try to overcome the sense of being institutionalised by well-paved roads and street lighting and delve into the wilds of Oxfordshire.
      Synonyms
      remote areas, wilderness
verbwīldwaɪld
[with object]West Indian
  • Treat (a person or animal) harshly, so that they become untrusting or nervous.

    〈西印度〉野蛮对待;残酷对待

    let your pigeon fly for a while: we don't want to wild him

Phrases

  • run wild

    • Grow or develop without restraint or discipline.

      (动植物,人)疯狂生长;变野蛮;变粗暴;失去控制(约束)

      these horses have been running wild since they were born

      这些马自出生以来一直缺乏驯化。

      figurative her imagination had run wild

      〈喻〉她让自己的想象力自由驰骋。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • It's a question of striking the right balance: too little discipline and teenagers might run wild; too much and they might rebel.
      • I mean, that's just someone's imagination running wild.
      • But urban front gardens are undoubtedly small, so letting the imagination run wild is best saved for the tranquillity and calm of the back garden.
      • Presumably he's hoping to let the island monkeys run wild, grow a fanbase around him and then start charging them for his signature too.
      • Let your imagination run wild and your taste buds take over.
      • Before your emotions run wild with your imagination, remember that you can't believe everything you hear.
      • This, of course, is the way rumors begin - with whispering and secrets and imaginations running wild.
      • It opens with a young boy in his room, imagination running wild, like any kid's does, thinking there is something in the shadows waiting to get him.
      • Without facts, there is nothing to stop imaginations running wild.
      • Strange and romantic experiences are in the offing, and you may even gain through a love affair, so let your imagination run wild.
      Synonyms
      grow unchecked, grow profusely, run riot, spread like wildfire, ramble, straggle
      run free, run amok, run riot, get out of control, cut loose, be undisciplined, go on the rampage
  • wild horses wouldn't ——

    • Used to convey that nothing could persuade or force one to do something.

      wild horses wouldn't have kept me away
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Well, a pack of wild horses wouldn't have got Angela out of the Sari Club - all the attention she was getting.
      • Even though I'll be in Birmingham on Saturday (Aston Villa v Charlton), wild horses wouldn't drag me away from some of these places on Sunday.
      • I don't know where he gets it from because wild horses wouldn't drag me onto a stage.
      • He assured friends that wild horses wouldn't drag him back to the Lords when he stepped down as Archbishop of York last weekend.
  • wild and woolly

    • Uncouth in appearance or behavior.

      粗野的,野蛮的

      the Australian outlaw's wild and woolly look
      he might have been a gunman in his wild and woolly youth
      Example sentencesExamples
      • And yet they both deal with the wild and woolly world of human behaviour.
      • Prayer to saints specifically unites us with the Church Triumphant in heaven, and thus is a much-needed reminder that the Church has endured for almost 2,000 wild and woolly and often hideous years.
      • Such is the wild and woolly insurance market in China today.
      • The Point Reyes peninsula is as wild and woolly as it gets, yet it's conveniently close - roughly 35 miles - to the hubbub of San Francisco.
      • Things will be much less wild and woolly here tomorrow, so I will be back then with a statement of principle.
      • Labor Council's walking labour history museum is back with more wild and woolly facts from the wonderful world of workplace relations.
      • The Government does not actually need the money, but because it has the money coming in, it comes up with all sorts of wild and woolly ways of spending it.
      • On the wild and woolly streets of Russia's capital city, the diesel engine is truly a menace to human health.
      • But given the wild and woolly wholesale market in the past three years, analyzing risk has been getting more difficult.
      • It was among the Vikings, however, that wild and woolly culture of the North Atlantic (today's Norway and Denmark), that mead really came into its own.

Origin

Old English wilde, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch and German wild.

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