- Main Entry:
- wil·der·ness

- Pronunciation:
-
\ˈwil-dər-nəs\
- Function:
- noun
- Etymology:
- Middle English, from wildern wild, from Old English wilddēoren of wild beasts
- Date:
- 13th century
1 a (1): a tract or region uncultivated and uninhabited by human beings (2): an area essentially undisturbed by human activity together with its naturally developed life community b: an empty or pathless area or region <in remote wildernesses of space groups of nebulae are found — G. W. Gray died 1960> c: a part of a garden devoted to wild growth2obsolete : wild or uncultivated state3 a: a confusing multitude or mass : an indefinitely great number or quantity <I would not have given it for a wilderness of monkeys — Shakespeare> b: a bewildering situation <those moral wildernesses of civilized life — Norman Mailer>