Desiderate [verb]

Definition of Desiderate:

desire

Synonyms of Desiderate:


Opposite/Antonyms of Desiderate:


Sentence/Example of Desiderate:

We desiderate such periods of relaxation and repose in Macaulay.

Haller has at length explained what he would desiderate in our confession.

We (they observe) need not deny a designer of the world, but we desiderate evidence of his actual workmanship.

It is the authoritative sentence of the Church then on this difficult subject that we desiderate.

Some may desiderate longer notices of German theories concerning the origin and character of the Acts.

Far be it from the present writer to regret or desiderate the adorably candid creature who so soon smirches her whiteness.

We should desiderate a closer approach, and not rest till we had found it.

Swinburne's first drafts offer none of the attractions which collectors of autographs commonly desiderate.

And tenderness, too—but does that appear a mawkish thing to desiderate in life?

That the oneness requires425 proof is prima facie evidence that it is a value, a desiderate, not an existence.