(adv.) To what place; -- used interrogatively; as, whither goest thou?
(adv.) To what or which place; -- used relatively.
(adv.) To what point, degree, end, conclusion, or design; whereunto; whereto; -- used in a sense not physical.
Example Sentences:
(1) (It belonged to Iain Watters , and he presented his ruined pudding to the judges from the murky depths of a fliptop bin, whither he had cast it in a fury; this event was even more scandalous than the custard theft of 2013 – don’t ask.)
(2) But whither North Carolina goes, so goes the rest of the nation.
(3) Even at a time when other aspects of foreign policy – such as over Iran – are breaking with blind whither-thou-goest Atlanticism, the ossified Orwellian terms of the nuclear discussion go unchallenged by government and opposition alike.
(4) Retrospective analysis of clinical cases observed for three years with respect to the appearance of the fundus and visual acuity was conducted to evaluate the effect of photocoagulation therapy on macular edema in relation to whither diabetic retinopathy was accompanied by, focal or cystoid, macular edema.
(5) There has been some uncertainty in relation to my title 'Whither the professions?'
(6) Whither Mr Whicher Paddy Considine’s return for the first of a brace of two-part stories in ITV’s The Suspicions of Mr Whicher could only draw 2.6 million viewers, a 13.7% share, between 9.05pm and 11pm.
(7) Effective pumping requires that the active transporter binds the pumped substrate, at high affinity, realized at the "whence side" (from which pumping takes place) and, at low affinity, at the "whither side" (to which pumping takes place).
(8) It was called “Whither B’Tselem?” “They thought about all the possible things B’Tselem could do once Israel doesn’t control the West Bank.
(9) They certainly shouldn’t be subjected to policies that will see them whither and die.
(10) However, the concreteness of the phone worker was not correlated with whither the scheduled appointment was kept by the caller.
(11) I am not by nature,” he wrote, “a ‘Whither America?’ man.” Only once did he try to encapsulate his own attitude to life, in a magazine called Living Philosophy.
(12) Yet if we strip the language down to what there is a "real need" for, whither poetry?
Wuther
Definition:
Example Sentences:
(1) • The Film weekly podcast saw host Jason Solomons talk to ... Bruce Robinson (director of Withnail & I) about his new film The Rum Diary ... Errol Morris (director of The Thin Blue Line) about Tabloid - his documentary on Joyce McKinney and the "Manacled Morman" case ... and Guardian film critic Xan Brooks (director of people to decent movies), who helped Jason review Arthur Christmas , The Awakening and Andrea Arnold's Wuthering Heights .
(2) 1Wuthering Heights Her wild eyes, flailing limbs and high-pitched vocals instantly made her ripe for parody , but it was the sheer emotional force of Wuthering Heights that made Kate Bush’s debut single a smash.
(3) Wuthering Heights is also about many other things besides that relationship.
(4) But this has always been the fate of Wuthering Heights.
(5) He'd been watching Wuthering Heights and he said 'You're a bit like Heathcliff.
(6) A canny follow-up to Wuthering Heights, it showcased a softer side to her voice and banished any lingering suspicions that this strange woman might be a one-hit oddity.
(7) I have only one question to ask the 2,000 readers who, according to a new poll for UKTV Drama, have just voted Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights the greatest love story of all time.
(8) Moreover, what would happen to small-scale, high-impact films such as Shame , Wuthering Heights , The Deep Blue Sea and We Need to Talk About Kevin ; all low-budget, "difficult" films that required a "cultural" imperative to get off the ground?
(9) Wuthering Heights forsakes Arnold's beloved housing estates altogether – though even the most forbidding of these would resemble Paris in springtime next to the rain-lashed moors near the Pennine Way where Arnold filmed her adaptation.
(10) Wuthering Heights is pretty much my most treasured novel, astonishing with every reading.
(11) Gone was the wide-eyed, shrill-voiced ingenue of Wuthering Heights.
(12) But the two most influential culprits of the modern era are Hollywood and the Bronte industry, which in their separate but related ways have conspired to belittle Wuthering Heights and to reduce Emily Bronte to someone barely connected to the real world.
(13) Her younger sister, Emily Brontë, wrote Wuthering Heights.
(14) STV had not always lost out when it had passed up the chance to screen new ITV drama, Hain said: the seven-year-old Daniela Nardini drama Sirens recently did better in Scotland than Wuthering Heights had across the rest of the UK.
(15) Just 1,236 answered a question on Pride and Prejudice, a mere 285 tackled Far from the Madding Crowd, and only 187 braved Wuthering Heights.
(16) Sober Charlotte (Jane Eyre) Bronte not crazy Emily (Wuthering Heights) Bronte.
(17) His first wake-up call to dance, at the age of 13, was watching a friend act out Bush's Wuthering Heights .
(18) During a 35-year recording career Bush has travelled from the theatrical teen prodigy of Wuthering Heights to 80s pagan-pop goddess to a more wistful chronicler of the power of the elements.
(19) The production wasn't undiluted hardship: there were raucous weekend shindigs, says Arnold, who hired a Kate Bush impersonator to sing Wuthering Heights for the wrap party.
(20) The effect, though, has always been the same - to make Wuthering Heights something less than the book actually is.