Usually in the passive: to naturally furnish (with something).
To give property to (someone) as a gift; specifically, to provide (a person or institution) with support in the form of a permanent fund of money or other benefits.
Followed by with, or rarely by of: to enrich or furnish with some faculty or quality.
To provide with a dower (“the portion that a widow receives from her deceased husband's property”) or a dowry (“property given to a bride”).
To habitually do (a given action).
To choose or agree to (do something); used to express intention but without any temporal connotations (+ bare infinitive), often in questions and negation.
To instruct (that something be done) in one's will.
Used to express the future tense, sometimes with some implication of volition when used in the first person. Compare shall.
To bequeath (something) to someone in one's will (legal document).
Expressing a present tense with some conditional or subjective weakening: "will turn out to", "must by inference".
To exert one's force of will (intention) in order to compel, or attempt to compel, something to happen or someone to do something.
To be able to, to have the capacity to.
To wish, desire (something).
One's intention or decision; someone's orders or commands.
Firmity of purpose, fixity of intent
The act of choosing to do something; a person’s conscious intent or volition.
One's independent faculty of choice; the ability to be able to exercise one's choice or intention.
A formal declaration of one's intent concerning the disposal of one's property and holdings after death; the legal document stating such wishes.