eager implies ardor and enthusiasm and sometimes impatience at delay or restraint.
eager to get started
avid adds to eager the implication of insatiability or greed.
avid for new thrills
keen suggests intensity of interest and quick responsiveness in action.
keen on the latest fashions
anxious emphasizes fear of frustration or failure or disappointment.
anxious not to make a social blunder
athirst stresses yearning but not necessarily readiness for action.
athirst for adventure
Examples of eager in a Sentence
… wine connoisseurs eager to visit cellars and late-fall pilgrims seeking the increasingly rare white truffle …—Corby Kummer, Atlantic, August 2000… so many religions were steeped in an absolutist frame of mind—each convinced that it alone had a monopoly on the truth and therefore eager for the state to impose this truth on others.—Carl Sagan, The Demon-Haunted World, 1996
She was eager to get started.
The crowd was eager for more.
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Mamdani greeted Charles and Queen Camilla after the royals made their way through the crowd of people eager to shake their hands.—Emma Caughlan, NBC news, 30 Apr. 2026 Daniel Chong, 104 minutes Pixar’s latest family-friendly charmer depicts a land war — over a patch of earth that was once occupied by beavers and other wildlife and that human developers are eager to blow up for a highway.—Brian Tallerico, Vulture, 30 Apr. 2026 Instead, Main Street is expected to cease operations, opening a scrum for streamers eager to pick up those rights.—Jacob Feldman, Sportico.com, 30 Apr. 2026 The protagonist of Father Goriot, Rastignac arrives in the capital a poor and sheltered nobleman eager to carve out a place for himself in high society.—Big Think, 29 Apr. 2026 See All Example Sentences for eager
Word History
Etymology
Middle English egre, from Anglo-French egre, aigre, from Latin acer — more at edge