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Discover LudwigThe phrase "wayward way" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English.
It is typically used to describe someone's behavior or actions as unpredictable, rebellious, or uncontrollable. Example: The teenager's wayward ways often got her into trouble with her parents.
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The resulting cross is wayward, way too high.
Alec Soth's Little Brown Mushroom imprint continues in its brilliantly wayward way with this beautiful book.
The obvious path, the only path for many, was a wayward way that led to nothing.
While the The Daily Telegraph bemoaned the large-scale production's logistical problems, "overall I found it touching, transformative and, in its own wayward way, a triumph".
Similar(56)
It dulls her sense of ethics and leads to ends-justify-the-means wayward ways.
Jarboe played one season at Troy before coaches there tired of his wayward ways.
He's always the first to go down a rapid, testing its wayward ways.
But the larkspur needs pollen from its own species to reproduce and suffered for the bumblebees' wayward ways.
Her social life is a tabloid writer's dream, and a recent hit song, "Rehab," is about not changing her wayward ways.
In it, some 50 paintings by artists ranging from Tiepolo, Paulus Potter and George Stubbs to Andy Warhol, David Hockney and, of course, William Wegman celebrate canis lupus familiaris and its wayward ways.
Soon she has traded in her wayward ways for crazed domesticity with a schoolteacher (Jared Harris), who lives on a junky little houseboat.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com