hankering
English
Verb
hankering
- present participle of hanker
- 2008 May 23, James Graff, "Lost: Labour's Love for Brown," Time:
- [T]here is a clear sense that Britain is hankering for a change at the top.
- 2008 May 23, James Graff, "Lost: Labour's Love for Brown," Time:
Noun
hankering (plural hankerings)
- (often followed by for or after) A strong, restless desire, longing, or mental inclination.
- 1840, Washington Irving, The Knight of Malta:
- I found that he had dipped a little in chimerical studies and had a hankering after astrology and alchymy.
- 1848, William Makepeace Thackeray, Vanity Fair, Chapter 24:
- " […] You don't mean," Mr. Osborne continued, gathering wrath and astonishment as the thought now first came upon him; "you don't mean that he's such a d—— fool as to be still hankering after that swindling old bankrupt's daughter? […] "
- 1849, Charlotte Bronte, chapter 1, in Shirley:
- Mike says he even likes to talk to him and run after him, but he has a hankering that Moore should be made an example of.
- 1861, Anthony Trollope, chapter 4, in Framley Parsonage:
- One may say that hankering after naughty things is the very essence of the evil into which we have been precipitated by Adam's fall.
- 1904, W. W. Jacobs, chapter 2, in Dialstone Lane:
- "Some people are fond of a stay-at-home life, but I always had a hankering after adventures."
- 2010 Aug. 12, Michael D. Lemonick, "Study: Lucy's Relatives Used Tools to Butcher Meat," Time:
- In other words, some species of human ancestor . . . not only had a hankering for meat, which scientists had not expected, but used tools to get it.
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