English to Urdu Dictionary wayward

wayward

ضدی
definition
adjective
her wayward, difficult sister
difficult to control or predict because of unusual or perverse behavior.
example
Many believe that the law will destroy efforts to reform a 'wayward' youth.
Three out of four New Zealanders want judges given the power to start cracking down on the parents of 'wayward' children.
A fabulous young woman leading a project for 'wayward' pupils explained how difficult it was for boys in her community.
The shamans believe this was caused by a 'wayward' spirit who reneged on their deal.
Still, she did a great job of taking the media spotlight off her 'wayward' brother, Michael.
He then had to deal with the increasingly 'wayward' behaviour of his younger daughter, Joanna.
Anyone who has had to manage 'wayward' or unruly livestock will know that the easiest way to do so is with food.
Now, he shoulders much of the blame for Daniel's 'wayward' behaviour.
This was supposed to be a feel-good story about a mission to save a 'wayward' cow.
But now that marriage has gone out of fashion in Britain, our young men are no longer growing out of their 'wayward' behaviour.
Spacey plays a man involved with a 'wayward' woman, a selfish, drunken slutty type.
He confessed that he had been fed up with the 'wayward' habits of his elder brother and that was the reason he killed him.
His threat, seen as a ploy to call 'wayward' allies to heel, prompted a rousing statement of support yesterday.
I liked it better when it was a home for 'wayward' boys and girls!
Your 'wayward' attitude and ill-conceived policies have done great harm to this country.
Teachers should also take a lead in helping correct the misconception of the now 'wayward' pupils.
Later he was even prepared to rule that 'wayward' parents should be sent on special parenting courses to teach them how to behave better.
Many religious texts legitimise keeping 'wayward' women under control through the use of physical violence.
She takes the rap for her 'wayward' brother, going to jail for his crimes.
I flatter myself by thinking that some 'wayward' janitor refuses to wash it off because he agrees with the sentiment.
However, in 1998, I changed my 'wayward' behaviour and, within a few months, closed all but one account.
And then like many before them they paid the penalty for their own 'waywardness' .
This is why, far from condemning individuals for their 'waywardness' , hard drugs policy is increasingly therapeutic - treating users as patients who need protecting from their addiction, rather than individuals who should be punished.
From still lifes to landscapes, graceful interiors to unwieldy allegorical scenes, his work is 'waywardly' old-fashioned.
‘Parents say the child is stubborn, wilful and try to put down his 'waywardness' to other things,’ she says.
We've gotten used to blaming parents for the 'waywardness' of their children, when we don't blame the children themselves.
It cannot compel you to remain in the congregation, forbid you from joining a competing sect, or punish you for your 'waywardness' .
On Friday, he had struck the ball as 'waywardly' as any seasoned golf watcher could remember, despite telling us before the tournament that he was ‘in control of everything right now, and quite happy’.
By the 1980s, however, her 'waywardness' , failing health and fading interest in contemporary music began to skew the quality of her output.
A lack of monitoring means misdemeanours go largely unreported, but already many British security firms, who traditionally enjoy the best reputation, have expressed worries about some of their colleagues' 'waywardness' .
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