It's Willful
We-e-ell, yes, BUT...!
In Britain, 'wilful' is the generally accepted spelling, whereas 'willful' is more common in the US. However, the double 'l' should never follow the 'u' except in the adverb, 'wilfully'.
Both "willful" and "wilful" are correct spellings of the same word, but the preferred spelling in American English is "willful," while "wilful" is more common in British English.
No, "VAXINATE" is not a correct spelling. The correct spelling is "VACCINATE."
The correct spelling is suffocate.
The correct spelling is "knob."
The correct spelling is "rainforest."
No, the correct spelling is "scheduled."
That is the correct spelling of "opinion" (a belief or view).
The mother was found guilty of willful child neglect.
The correct spelling is privileges.The correct spelling is privileges.The correct spelling is privileges.The correct spelling is privileges.The correct spelling is privileges.The correct spelling is privileges.The correct spelling is privileges.The correct spelling is privileges.The correct spelling is privileges.The correct spelling is privileges.The correct spelling is privileges.
No, "VAXINATE" is not a correct spelling. The correct spelling is "VACCINATE."
No, the correct spelling isopportunities.
Tomorrow is the correct spelling.
The spelling employees is correct.
The correct spelling is "opened".
The correct spelling isproctopexy.
No, "surplussed" is not a correct spelling. The correct spelling is "surplused."
The correct spelling isfistulagram.
The correct spelling is suffocate.