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Synonyms
wild (wīld)

[Middle English wilde, from Old English.]

adjective: wild·er, wild·est. 

  1. Occurring, growing, or living in a natural state; not domesticated, cultivated, or tamed: wild geese; edible wild plants.
  2. Not inhabited or farmed: remote, wild country.
  3. Uncivilized or barbarous; savage.
    1. Lacking supervision or restraint: wild children living in the street.
    2. Disorderly; unruly: a wild scene in the school cafeteria.
    3. Characterized by a lack of moral restraint; dissolute or licentious: recalled his wild youth with remorse.
  4. Lacking regular order or arrangment; disarranged: wild locks of long hair.
  5. Full of, marked by, or suggestive of strong, uncontrolled emotion: wild with jealousy; a wild look in his eye; a wild rage.
  6. Extravagant; fantastic: a wild idea.
  7. Furiously disturbed or turbulent; stormy: wild weather.
  8. Risky; imprudent: wild financial schemes.
    1. Impatiently eager: wild to get away for the weekend.
    2. Informal Highly enthusiastic: just wild about the new music.
  9. Based on little or no evidence or probability; unfounded: wild accusations; a wild guess.
  10. Deviating greatly from an intended course; erratic: a wild bullet.
  11. Games Having an equivalence or value determined by the cardholder's choice: playing poker with deuces wild.

adverb 

In a wild manner: growing wild; roaming wild.

noun 

  1. A natural or undomesticated state: returned the zoo animals to the wild; plants that grow abundantly in the wild.
  2. An uninhabited or uncultivated region. Often used in the plural: the wilds of the northern steppes.

intransitive verb: wild·ed, wild·ing, wilds. 

Slang
To go about in a group threatening, robbing, or attacking others: “Police said that the youngsters … were part of a larger group of teenagers who were ‘wilding,’—their slang for terrorizing and bullying” (Maclean's)

derivatives

wild́ly
adverb
wild́ness
noun