The reader is here to note, that this eighth section is entirely wanting in the old Latin version, as Spanheim truly observes; nor is there any other reason for it, I suppose, than the great difficulty of an exact translation.
The history contained in this section is entirely wanting in all our other copies, both of Ezra and Esdras.
In a great number of such cases every guarantee for the trustworthiness of the statements is entirely wanting, and, as His and still earlier Kant have already said, they are of no greater value as evidence than the merest tales.
In the Crabs the "scale" is entirely wanting; their Zoeae have it indicated in the form of a moveable appendage, which is often exceedingly minute.
Arnold,[10] without describing any individual case, states that "very rarely the appendix is entirely wanting.
A distinct digestive segment may even be entirely wanting, owing to its failure to differentiate from the oesophagus on the one hand and from the endgut on the other.
These beautiful birds inhabit the western and interior parts of Africa, but information as to their habits in their native land is entirely wanting.
In the cursorial races, such as the Ostriches and the Apteryx, whose wings are not available for flying, the keel is entirely wanting.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "entirely wanting" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.