Morgpie Leaks: What They Don't Want You to Know - Postcolonial Perspectives
MSN: Handyman reveals shockingly easy trick to avoid costly toilet leaks: 'Please don't ever stop giving tips and tricks' Handyman reveals shockingly easy trick to avoid costly toilet leaks: 'Please don't ever stop giving tips and tricks' Vail Daily: Caring for your roof: When spring has sprung, make sure leaks don’t come with it Caring for your roof: When spring has sprung, make sure leaks don’t come with it Pensacola News Journal: Content Creators Morgpie and Zander Small Launch FanLock Leak Removal Platform The Indianapolis Star: Content Creators Morgpie and Zander Small Launch FanLock Leak Removal Platform The meaning of WANT is to be needy or destitute. How to use want in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Want.
Understanding the Context
[usually passive] want somebody (+ adv./prep.) to need somebody to be present in the place or for the purpose mentioned She's wanted immediately in the director's office. If you want something, you feel a desire or a need for it. I want a drink. People wanted to know who this talented designer was.
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Key Insights
They began to want their father to be the same as other daddies. In informal situations, we can use want plus the to-infinitive to advise, recommend or warn. It is almost always in the present simple, but we can also use it with ’ll (the short form of will): … want (third-person singular simple present wants, present participle wanting, simple past and past participle wanted) (transitive) To wish for or desire (something); to feel a need or desire for; to crave, hanker, or demand. [from 18th c.] quotations to be without or be deficient in: to want judgment; to want knowledge. to fall short by (a specified amount): The sum collected wants but a few dollars of the desired amount.