Hanker in a sentence as a verb

3 hours is still a good run, but I hanker for what once was!

It almost makes me hanker for the bad old days when we had to support IE6.

Few of these kids hanker to become professors.

Reclaim lost focus and time by using tools which don't hanker for your attention

Practice interview questions online on career cup, hanker rank, and the like.

When the demand disappears and the town goes back to where it once was, then people hanker for the good old days when it was a bustling boom town.

Deploying Rails Apps is still a motherfucking nightmare - I hanker for the days of just git pulling and changing a couple of config vars.

There seems to be a really large group of people in well off western democracies even who hanker for an authoritarian leader.

While some old fuddy-duddy white dudes may hanker for the days of old and wish we could go back - most people my age are 'conservatives' because we are against the growth of government and its encroachment into our affairs.

This attitude persists, even though the origin is forgotten; the majority of people hanker after displays of status even if they don't consciously understand what they are doing.

Those who hanker for surgery, or lightsabres, or precision archery, or any number of analogical departures -- they naturally drift to other languages.

Implying some sort of superiority for developers who hanker for such keywords as virtual, abstract, override or private is hardly going to endear your project to folks that probably have quite a lot of experience using JavaScript.

Hanker definitions

verb

desire strongly or persistently

See also: long yearn