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The phrase "word desire" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It may be intended to express a longing or wish for a specific word or concept, but it lacks clarity and context. Example: "I have a word desire for a term that captures the essence of freedom."
Exact(10)
Another word: desire.
My own trouble with Surrealism, which becomes acute at the Met, centers on that word "desire".
The word desire comes from the Latin verb desiderare, "to await from the stars".
She has also recommended renaming the condition; she'd like to shed the word "desire," with its overheated associations.
The word desire dates from the 13th century and has its roots in the Old French desirer, and from the Latin, desiderare ("to long for or wish for").
The word "desire" ripples through "Milestones," and always, it seems, meaning the same thing — the drunken temptress on the ship, a tattooed boy in a Washington, D.C., coffee shop, the terrible peril of the church hop.
Similar(50)
All of this might seem awfully abstract, but Basson's lesson for women, which has been distilled by sex therapists into three words, "desire follows arousal," is a real rearrangement of expectation and a reweighting of sexual theory.
A leader will utter a vaguely worded desire in the heat of the moment -- or more likely create a climate of revenge -- and his subordinates translate the vague desire into specific, often tragic action.
"The words DESIRE OBTAIN CHERISH, woven into this over abundant advertising landscape, spun these messages back at us, laughing at the absurd nature of our constant over-saturation of our corporate marketing brothers".
While traveling with Mr. Bush last week in Britain, Mr. Powell declared that the wording desired by others on the agency board was "deficient".
In this latter category is the Paul Broste Rock Museum, which was established in 1966 by a local farmer, Broste, who fancied himself an artist and a collector of rare stones, and who, in his words, desired "to have a good building so that the collection could be preserved for posterity".
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com