well-willing
English
Etymology
From Middle English welewillynge, welwillende, from Old English welwillende (“well-wishing, benevolent, kindly, good”), equivalent to well + willing.
Adjective
well-willing (comparative more well-willing, superlative most well-willing)
- Wishing well; well-inclined; favourable; friendly; propitious.
- 1900, The Irish ecclesiastical record - Page 39:
- This is rational life's first, simplest, most natural longing when at rest: to be always and all-ways good as wholly well-willing for ever—which is essentially good-will's as it is love's self-generated and self-resting thought—for ever and ever !
- 1900, The Irish ecclesiastical record - Page 39:
This article is issued from Wiktionary. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.