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What is the adjective for willingness?

What's the adjective for willingness? Here's the word you're looking for.

Included below are past participle and present participle forms for the verb wile which may be used as adjectives within certain contexts.

wilful
  1. intentional; deliberate
  2. stubborn and determined
  3. Synonyms:
  4. Examples:
    1. “This testimony must be considered along with other evidence in determining whether there was a wilful neglect of duty.”
      “As the younger became more wilful and wayward, making the most of her privileged status, the elder became more withdrawn, worried about her destiny.”
      “Even Samuel Johnson, who was notoriously wilful when it came to taking the advice of his physicians, listened first and then ignored them.”
willing
  1. Ready to do something that is not (can't be expected as) a matter of course.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “One thing Witmer tries to emphasize is that she is willing to communicate with students about issues important to them.”
      “It was a willing sacrifice of his dignity and personal integrity to keep a promise he had made to his dying sister.”
      “My friends are always there to lend a willing hand in times of need.”
wileful
  1. Full of wiles; deceitful.
willful
  1. US standard spelling of wilful.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “This testimony must be considered along with other evidence in determining whether there was a willful neglect of duty.”
      “As the younger became more willful and wayward, making the most of her privileged status, the elder became more withdrawn, worried about her destiny.”
      “Even Samuel Johnson, who was notoriously willful when it came to taking the advice of his physicians, listened first and then ignored them.”
willed
  1. Having a document specifying inheritance.
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Jason's grandfather leaves Jason with 12 separate assignments to be completed within a year in order for Jason to receive his willed inheritance.”
      “However, satisfaction generally meant a commitment to do good deeds toward one's neighbors and a willed intent to sin no more.”
willable
  1. (philosophy) Capable of being willed.
  2. Examples:
    1. “Another advantage to being an All Points Accommodations Inc member is that membership is willable and transferable to family members.”
      “It's nice to have a bit of success on home ground and hopefully I willable to perform again.”
      “Descartes's second-order moral principles necessitate an account of willable ends that are other than virtue and that are knowable as true goods.”
willinger
  1. comparative form of willing: more willing
willingest
  1. superlative form of willing: most willing
wilfullest
wilfuller
wiled
wiling
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