enthusiastic |
1. adj. With zealous fervor; excited, motivated. | |
A young man (...) of a visionary and enthusiastic character. — W. Irving. | |
an enthusiastic lover of art | |
passionate |
1. adj. Given to strong feeling, sometimes romantic, sexual, or both. | |
2. adj. Fired with intense feeling. | |
3. adj. (obsolete) Suffering; sorrowful. | |
4. n. A passionate individual. | |
5. v. (obsolete) To fill with passion, or with another given emotion. | |
6. v. (obsolete) To express with great emotion. | |
longing |
1. v. present participle of long | |
2. n. An earnest and deep, not greatly passionate, but rather melancholic desire. | |
3. n. The buying of a financial instrument with the expectation that its value will rise | |
long |
1. adj. Having much distance from one terminating point on an object or an area to another terminating point (usually applies to horizontal dimensions; see Usage Notes below). | |
It's a long way from the Earth to the Moon. | |
2. adj. Having great duration. | |
The pyramids of Egypt have been around for a long time. | |
3. adj. Seemingly lasting a lot of time, because it is boring or tedious or tiring. | |
4. adj. (UK, dialect) Not short; tall. | |
5. adj. (finance) Possessing or owning stocks, bonds, commodities or other financial instruments with the aim of benefiting of the expected rise in their value. | |
I'm long in DuPont; I have a long position in DuPont. | |
6. adj. (cricket) Of a fielding position, close to the boundary (or closer to the boundary than the equivalent short position). | |
7. adj. (tennis, of a ball or a shot) That land beyond the baseline (and therefore is out). | |
No! That forehand is longnb.... | |
8. adj. Occurring or coming after an extended interval; distant in time; far away. | |
9. adv. Over a great distance in space. | |
He threw the ball long. | |
10. adv. For a particular duration. | |
How long is it until the next bus arrives? | |
11. adv. For a long duration. | |
Will this interview take long? | |
Paris has long been considered one of the most cultured cities in the world. | |
12. n. (linguistics) A long vowel. | |
13. n. (programming) A long integer variable, twice the size of an int, two or four times the size of a short, and half of a long long. | |
A long is typically 64 bits in a 32-bit environment. | |
14. n. (finance) An entity with a long position in an asset. | |
Every uptick made the longs cheer. | |
15. n. (music) A note formerly used in music, one half the length of a large, twice that of a breve. | |
16. v. (transitive, finance) To take a long position in. | |
17. v. (intransitive) To await, aspire, desire greatly (something to occur or to be true) | |
She longed for him to come back. | |
18. adj. (archaic) On account of, because of. | |
19. v. (archaic) To be appropriate to, to pertain or belong to. | |
20. n. longitude | |
eagerly |
1. adv. In an eager manner. | |
eager |
1. adj. (obsolete) Sharp; sour; acid. | |
2. adj. (obsolete) Sharp; keen; bitter; severe. | |
3. adj. Desirous; keen to do or obtain something. | |
The hounds were eager in the chase. | |
I was eager to show my teacher how much I'd learned over the holidays. | |
You stayed up all night to get to the front of the queue. You must be very eager to get tickets. | |
4. adj. Brittle; inflexible; not ductile. | |
5. adj. (comptheory) Not employing lazy evaluation; calculating results immediately, rather than deferring calculation until they are required. | |
an eager algorithm | |
6. n. alternative form of eagre (tidal bore). | |
greedy |
1. adj. Having greed; consumed by selfish desires. | |
2. adj. Prone to overeat. | |
3. adj. (regular expressions) Tending to match as much text as possible. | |
This regular expression performs a greedy match. | |
4. adj. (computer science, of an algorithm) That tries to find the global optimum by finding the local optimum at each stage. | |