wild

wild — adjective

1. showing strong or violent emotions or actions that are not kept in check by rule

1.形容詞B1
釋義

showing strong or violent emotions or actions that are not kept in check by rules, reason, or discipline

例句

Eitan gave a wild laugh when he heard the ridiculous news, startling everyone nearby.

collocation: wild + laugh / shout / gesture

The storm grew wilder through the night, tearing roofs off several houses along the coast.

comparative form: wilder

同義詞
  • unruly

    stronger focus on refusing to obey rules, especially of people or groups

  • out of control

    more general phrase for any situation that cannot be managed

  • fierce

    more aggressive or violent in tone, often used for weather or animals

反義詞
  • calm

    peaceful and controlled, opposite of violent or emotional

  • controlled

    kept within limits, opposite of unrestrained

用法筆記

Often describes behaviour, emotions, weather, or crowds that have broken free from normal restraint.

常見錯誤

The children were wild excited.
The children were wildly excited.
💡'wild' is an adjective; use the adverb 'wildly' to modify another adjective.

2. unusual and exciting; describes things that are creatively daring or strikingly

2.形容詞B1
釋義

unusual and exciting; describes things that are creatively daring or strikingly enjoyable

例句

Jessica had a wild idea to paint her entire bedroom ceiling like a night sky full of stars.

collocation: wild idea / plan / scheme

Sade went on a wild adventure through the mountains of Thailand with nothing but a small backpack.

collocation: wild adventure / ride / journey

同義詞
  • crazy

    more informal; can imply the thing is both exciting and slightly foolish

  • amazing

    broader and more general; less specific about the 'daring' element

  • unbelievable

    focuses on how surprising the thing is rather than its excitement

反義詞
  • ordinary

    normal and expected, opposite of unusual or exciting

  • boring

    dull and uninteresting, opposite of exciting

用法筆記

Carries a positive or impressed tone — wild parties, wild ideas, wild stories are seen as fun, not dangerous. Informal in many contexts.

3. living or growing freely in nature, without being raised or cared for by people

3.形容詞A2
釋義

living or growing freely in nature, without being raised or cared for by people

例句

Mira spotted a wild fox near the edge of the forest while walking her dog at sunrise.

The hikers picked wild mushrooms along the trail, but an expert warned them that some were poisonous.

collocation: wild mushroom / berry / herb

同義詞
  • undomesticated

    more formal and technical; used mainly for animals, not plants

  • untamed

    poetic or literary; suggests an animal that has not been trained or gentled

反義詞
  • domesticated

    trained to live with or be useful to people

  • tame

    gentle and not afraid of people, usually because of training

用法筆記

Opposite of 'domesticated' for animals and 'cultivated' for plants. This is the most basic, concrete sense of 'wild'.

常見錯誤

There are wild deers in the park.
There are wild deer in the park.
💡'deer' has the same form for singular and plural.

4. describes an area of land that has not been farmed, built on, or settled by peop

4.形容詞B1
釋義

describes an area of land that has not been farmed, built on, or settled by people

例句

Christopher drove for hours across wild country where the only roads were made of dirt and gravel.

collocation: wild country / land / landscape

Sade's family owns a piece of wild land in the hills where they go camping twice a year.

同義詞
  • untouched

    emphasises that humans have not changed the area at all

  • remote

    focuses on distance from towns rather than the lack of farming or building

  • desolate

    suggests the area feels empty or sad rather than simply natural

反義詞
  • developed

    built on and equipped with roads, houses, and services

  • cultivated

    farmed or planted by people

用法筆記

Only applies to physical landscapes — cannot describe a room or building as 'wild land'.

5. based on imagination, guesswork, or emotion rather than on real evidence or care

5.形容詞B2
釋義

based on imagination, guesswork, or emotion rather than on real evidence or careful thinking

例句

Vikram dismissed the rumour as a wild guess that had no connection to what really happened.

collocation: wild guess / claim / accusation

The newspaper printed a wild story about aliens living beneath the city, but nobody took it seriously.

同義詞
  • unreasonable

    broader — can also describe behaviour or demands, not just statements

  • absurd

    stronger negative tone; suggests the idea is laughably wrong

  • baseless

    formal; emphasises that there is zero evidence behind the claim

反義詞

用法筆記

Usually carries a negative or sceptical tone. Commonly used with nouns like 'guess', 'claim', 'accusation', 'rumour'.

6. extremely interested in or excited about someone or something, often to the poin

6.形容詞B2
釋義

extremely interested in or excited about someone or something, often to the point of obsession

例句

Mauricio is absolutely wild about vintage vinyl records and spends every weekend at flea markets.

pattern: wild about [something]

Amihan's little brother is wild about dinosaurs and can name every species in the museum.

同義詞
  • crazy about

    equally informal and interchangeable in most contexts

  • keen on

    more British and slightly less intense

  • passionate about

    more formal; suggests deeper commitment rather than temporary excitement

反義詞

文法句型

wild about + noun / gerund

用法筆記

Almost always used in the pattern 'wild about [something/someone]'. The phrase 'go wild' describes a crowd's enthusiastic reaction.

常見錯誤

I am wild of video games.
I am wild about video games.
💡the correct preposition is 'about', not 'of'.

wild — adverb

wild — noun