Find the word definition

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
desperately
adverb
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
desperately poor (=so poor that it causes great suffering)
▪ Half the population remains desperately poor.
desperately unlucky
▪ Thierry Henry was desperately unlucky not to score when his shot hit the post.
desperately worried (=extremely worried)
▪ All this time I was desperately worried about my family.
desperately
▪ They ran in all directions, desperately seeking escape.
desperately
▪ He desperately wants his mum and dad to get back together.
desperately
▪ They try desperately to please other people.
desperately/terribly/dreadfully unhappy
▪ It was the first time she had been away from home and she was desperately unhappy.
need sth desperately/badly/urgently
▪ More blood donors are urgently needed.
search frantically/desperately (=in a hurried way, because you feel very worried)
▪ Panic-stricken parents frantically searched for their children.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
close
▪ His do-or-die bid failed when Optiebeurs Felix refused after a desperately close turn into the second fence.
▪ But it will be desperately close as two exceptionally committed sides bid to keep their championship season alive.
▪ Shearer was desperately close to a goal and then Mitchell bounced a shot off the bar.
▪ The story came desperately close to beginning with a victory.
▪ That was a desperately close-run thing and it may have taken its toll.
hard
▪ One looked at the team and found it desperately hard to agree.
▪ She tried desperately hard to be all things to everyone, and ultimately it killed her.
▪ He was trying desperately hard to make amends, she thought.
▪ Accommodation is, however, desperately hard to find.
ill
▪ John: In 1985, John had to give up his career as a consulting engineer because he was desperately ill.
▪ It is only when she falls desperately ill that he recognises how much he loves her.
▪ Now 35 other desperately ill people will get Temozolomide because the extra cash is being used to make more of the drug.
▪ A woman had been admitted with acute pancreatitis, desperately ill.
▪ However, in the winter of 1659 she became desperately ill and on the point of death.
▪ Two-year-old John Storey was desperately ill in hospital with internal injuries and skin burns.
▪ New visa requirements mean 206 people, including a desperately ill girl, won't be allowed in.
important
▪ It is desperately important to have an outside interest if you're in politics.
▪ Choice of company is desperately important.
▪ It suddenly seemed desperately important to meet the woman behind that haunting voice.
lonely
▪ It was a desperately lonely time.
▪ Back-country life in the cabins was desperately lonely, harsh, and violent.
poor
▪ The unease is not restricted to the desperately poor, swampy country of 10m people.
▪ But the Valley remained desperately poor, with little possibility of economic expansion or improvement.
▪ Far from being desperately poor peasants, the squatters were clearly city dwellers.
▪ Children, the elderly, the desperately poor.
▪ The prices are still too high to allow more than a small number of people in desperately poor countries to be treated.
▪ It was that bust-up which ruined team morale this season and contributed to Lancashire's desperately poor season.
▪ He remained desperately poor and obstinately proud.
▪ Saint Antoine, south-eastern suburb of Paris, a desperately poor area in the eighteenth century, with many starving unemployed.
short
▪ Never desperately short of money, he was lucky in attracting funds and spent his money generously.
▪ Pyongyang claims that a year of floods and other natural disasters have left the country desperately short of rice.
▪ The cities are desperately short of food.
▪ He asked my permission to use new rope because we were desperately short of traditional rope.
▪ In addition the economy was no longer so desperately short of workers.
▪ No buyer for the Nauvoo temple ever emerged, and their funds ran desperately short.
▪ The mainframe will soon be history, the AS/400 is still worth saving, but time is desperately short.
▪ Victim Support helps thousands of people every year, but the service is running desperately short of money.
sorry
▪ He had told her enough about his parents' passionate devotion to each other for Julia to feel desperately sorry for her.
▪ He was just so desperately sorry she was upset.
▪ My father was always desperately sorry for these jobless, penniless people, especially those who were ex-service men like himself.
trying
▪ Retching, vomiting and desperately trying to rub its face clean, the animal learns a lesson it never forgets.
▪ I was desperately trying to keep control but felt horribly threatened.
▪ So there he was, in a merchant bank, desperately trying to restore the family fortunes.
▪ Most of the third-year students had been back for a month already, desperately trying to catch up with their second-year work.
▪ Angel was now desperately trying to make his way as a professional polo player.
unhappy
▪ I was desperately unhappy, almost suicidal.
▪ No hopeless lover of a living maiden was ever so desperately unhappy as Pygmallon.
▪ Although in other poems Leapor shows that labouring class women can be desperately unhappy in marriage, she is not unequivocal.
▪ He said she was desperately unhappy.
▪ She sounds desperately unhappy, poor thing, and perhaps she should talk to a psychiatrist.
▪ The fact was that Sir Herbert was a desperately unhappy man.
▪ All of that I could understand, but it concerned me that she was so nervous and desperately unhappy.
▪ Their relationship had become conflict-ridden to the point where each of them was desperately unhappy.
unlucky
▪ Barnes was desperately unlucky after a magnificent one-two with McManaman to see his volley come back off the foot of the post.
worried
▪ Your parents are desperately worried, and no wonder.
▪ Derek returned home a desperately worried person.
▪ All this time I was desperately worried about my family.
▪ The lawyer was desperately worried about his friend Doctor Jekyll.
▪ She felt insecure, unsure of the future and desperately worried about Steve and Maria Luisa.
▪ Citizens in inner-city areas are desperately worried and rightly so, about street crime.
▪ Male speaker I am desperately worried that the aid won't get tothe people it's meant for.
■ VERB
cling
▪ She was clinging desperately to the hang-glider.
▪ These few will desperately cling to traditional structures and culture.
▪ She was clinging desperately to normality and self-respect.
▪ She drew him close, clinging desperately.
▪ The stairs have become rope ladders, with managers clinging desperately for balance.
▪ The faith that something would and must be done to save the city was desperately clung to....
▪ On the other were tenants clinging desperately to the last vestige of their community.
▪ As I rode a high wave I saw a small boy desperately clinging to a piece of board.
feel
▪ He had told her enough about his parents' passionate devotion to each other for Julia to feel desperately sorry for her.
▪ Only she is feeling desperately homesick.
▪ I felt desperately fatigued, but also exhilarated.
▪ Freeing a hand, George felt desperately in his pockets.
▪ All at once, she felt desperately tired.
▪ She felt desperately tired but couldn't yawn.
▪ Although Luke translated the whole time for her, she felt desperately isolated and sick with longing for Ricky.
▪ Sometimes he felt desperately shy and this specially seemed to happen when titled laymen or captains of industry appeared.
fight
▪ Hair and clothing saturated, she fought desperately to keep control.
hope
▪ She didn't like him, but hoped desperately that he would win.
▪ Again and again Cheryl signalled the message, hoping desperately that Angela would read it.
▪ As the fiery blush mounted her cheeks, she shook his hand briefly, desperately hoping for a miracle.
▪ Old age doesn't seem to have much to offer, yet I desperately hope to attain it.
▪ He could feel his heart thudding furiously and hoped desperately that he'd succeeded in making his voice sound casual.
▪ Ministry of Agriculture vets were last night desperately hoping germs would not spread to those animals.
▪ I religiously told Jim about each of Neil's presents, desperately hoping to provoke some sort of response.
▪ Francis, rapidly running out of striking options, is still desperately hoping Watson can play a part.
look
▪ She looked desperately around for Gabriel.
▪ One's heart bled for Cowdrey, for he looked desperately nervous and soon succumbed without scoring.
▪ He was sickened by sifting through hundreds of case notes on crimes against children, desperately looking for clues.
▪ Following them, Mr Kinnock looks desperately vulnerable.
▪ He looked desperately up and down the road for a woman who fitted her description.
▪ Panting, Ruth looked desperately round at the great host of Women.
▪ He looked desperately around but could see no sign of his attacker.
▪ The Duchess was desperately looking for help.
need
▪ In this country we have a process that desperately needs changing.
▪ That 5 % of his may not last, but it is 5 % that Gore desperately needs to hold on to.
▪ We desperately need to develop new situational value systems, otherwise we are tied to lumbering dogma or immediate gain or defensiveness.
▪ His hard, tough, unsentimental mind gave to the weak young republic the guidance it desperately needed.
▪ Secondly, we desperately need a comprehensive structure of opportunity and provision for the 16-19 age groups.
▪ This team desperately needed a showman, and it got one when it persuaded Barkley to re-enlist.
▪ And they all desperately need a strategy for coping.
▪ Grandfather learned that night how Yi desperately needed helpers to raise funds for the resistance.
search
▪ Joyce raced through the store, searching desperately.
▪ Doubled up he drew his knife, eyes behind the vizor desperately searching the inky blackness.
▪ Hencke's eyes searched desperately around the room, for a way out, a means of escape.
▪ Crouched on the floor Leonore searched desperately for Lais's pulse, tears streaming down her face, blinding her.
▪ These poor chaps were searching desperately for a project which would not be cursed with the ephemeral vulgarity of their usual tasks.
seek
▪ Now the Conservative Party, the markets and the country at large all desperately seek reassurance.
▪ The Timberwolves are desperately seeking backcourt help, mainly at point guard.
▪ As it drew nearer to Corrie's fifth birthday she began desperately seeking a way in which to keep her in Chertsey.
▪ We both were desperately seeking boyfriends.
▪ Organisers of the 12-year-old event are now desperately seeking an alternative venue to keep the increasingly popular festival alive.
▪ The small fish broke into smaller shoals, desperately seeking escape.
struggle
▪ It starts with the observation that Major is struggling desperately to gain stature and authority.
▪ Still, it was painful, and he struggled desperately to swallow his pride.
▪ She had never seen men like this in her life and she struggled desperately to pull out of their reach.
▪ Why did he feel as though he had just run his sword through the heart of something small and desperately struggling for survival?
▪ Mavis fell and struggled desperately to regain her feet.
▪ You don't look to me like some one desperately struggling to nurse a company-patient back to life.
think
▪ This just won't do, the Dean thought desperately.
▪ I thought desperately about fighting but could not figure it out.
▪ It was a mirror, he thought desperately: he was dreaming of a mirror.
▪ Being with young children, Molly thought desperately, is like having to take out a geriatric, or a drunk.
▪ It can't really be alive, she thought desperately.
▪ But I've no choice, Ruth thought desperately.
▪ At this rate, she thought desperately, the lunch hour will be over before I even get there.
▪ Am I plain fickle, she thought desperately.
try
▪ Everybody tries desperately to have a good time, but it never really happens.
▪ The cops in the bar were trying desperately to pass as barflies.
▪ The Lieutenant was desperately trying to stay in his saddle.
▪ The day before he died he tried desperately to communicate something to me.
▪ He is unfailingly polite and tries desperately to understand other people's views.
▪ A mother may try desperately to calm her angry crying seven-month-old with hugs and offers of juice and toys.
▪ Now Labour's support is falling, and the government is trying desperately to placate its business enemies.
▪ About eight months later she desperately tried to get him back in.
want
▪ The Giants were leading the series 3-1 and wanted desperately to avoid returning to Wrigley Field for a sixth game.
▪ The political situation made her work increasingly dangerous, and some part of me desperately wanted to urge her to quit.
▪ She wanted desperately to make him understand that she wasn't the kind of girl Giles had labelled her.
▪ We think she desperately wants to be friends with you.
▪ And he desperately wants to overtake Hadlee before Border establishes a new record for Test runs.
▪ Something in me desperately wanted my mother to acquiesce when my father said that.
▪ Elaine desperately wants to be free: free to fall in love, work hard and have fun.
▪ She desperately wanted his last article published.
wish
▪ They were both gazing out of the window like homesick boys, as if desperately wishing to be elsewhere.
▪ She wished desperately that he would come home.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Lori wanted desperately to have a child.
▪ We're desperately trying to avoid laying off people.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Back-country life in the cabins was desperately lonely, harsh, and violent.
▪ But before that happens, she desperately wants a decent game.
▪ Following them, Mr Kinnock looks desperately vulnerable.
▪ Retching, vomiting and desperately trying to rub its face clean, the animal learns a lesson it never forgets.
▪ Robyn put the bottle to her lips again - defiantly, desperately.
▪ She needed desperately to be alone for a little while - to think.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Desperately

Desperately \Des"per*ate*ly\, adv. In a desperate manner; without regard to danger or safety; recklessly; extremely; as, the troops fought desperately.

She fell desperately in love with him.
--Addison.

Wiktionary
desperately

adv. In a desperate manner; without regard to danger or safety; recklessly.

WordNet
desperately
  1. adv. with great urgency; "health care reform is needed urgently"; "the soil desperately needed potash" [syn: urgently]

  2. in intense despair; "the child clung desperately to her mother"

Wikipedia
Desperately (Bruce Robison song)

"Desperately" is the title of a country music song written by Bruce Robison and Monte Warden. Robison first recorded the song on his 1998 album Wrapped. It was later covered by country singer George Strait on his 2003 album Honkytonkville. Released in January 2004 as that album's third and final single, it peaked at number 6 on the Billboard country charts. Its b-side, "Honk If You Honky Tonk", peaked at number 45 based on unsolicited airplay.

Desperately (Don Williams song)

"Desperately" is a song written by Jamie O'Hara and Kevin Welch, and recorded by American country music artist Don Williams. It was released in August 1988 as the third single from the album Traces. The song reached number 7 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart.

Usage examples of "desperately".

One regiment was almost entirely destroyed, the other pressed forward as far as the abattis, fighting so desperately that Daun was obliged to bring up large reinforcements before he could drive the survivors back.

Only at the great ports of the King of Spain, such as Acapulco, Panama, and Lima, have you any hope of trading your quicksilver for what you so desperately need.

At the same time, Adams decided that young Charles, whose health remained uneven and who had become desperately homesick for his mother, should return to her in the care of Benjamin Waterhouse, who was on his way back to Boston.

But when his American doctor, James Jay, the brother of John Jay, had suggested a sojourn in England, he had gone off to London with John Quincy and later to Bath, to take the waters, an experience Adams had found little to his liking and that was cut short by a summons to return to Holland to secure still another desperately needed loan.

IN THE FINAL DAYS of May 1786, John Adams was called on to hurry to Amsterdam once again, to secure still another desperately needed Dutch loan for the United States.

What he was telling Adams, to be sure, was what Adams desperately wanted to hear.

Satan had been trying desperately to nullify that situation before it occurred, and all the Incarnations had battled him to preserve it.

He struck out wildly, shoving at die sand, trying desperately to keep from being buried, from disappearing beneath it forever, trapped and held by Banshee herself, fop her children the ants and more sand fell on him and around him and the ground trembled with a terrible sense of fragility and then it was over.

Yezidee Arrak Sou-Sou under observation, and that he needs you desperately.

He hauled out the automanual, punched keys desperately to find out how to read the combat display.

Bryce Babcock desperately turned the key, at the same time pressing his foot on the gas.

So Barnett, alarmed now at the inevitability of both violence and personal financial ruin, began desperately trying to somehow cool down the flames of the crisis without appearing to cave in to the federals.

Now, with the Empire State Building black with bees, a crack team of scientists race desperately against time to fight an enemy they only partly comprehend.

Desperately the huge snake tried to wriggle off, retreating back as the bibliophages coiled around him in turn.

According to one story, which I desperately hope is exaggerated, fifteen hundred children per month were being killed in the state of Bihar, their bones then sent to Calcutta for processing and export.