I was also pleased that, although it aspired to be chic, the Torri was charming.
From the telegraph.co.uk
Yang says he aspired to be a bodybuilder and once dreamed of owning his own gym.
From the sacbee.com
Each of these buyers aspired to relevancy by having a legitimate cloud offering.
From the forbes.com
He could've gone the vacuous love song route, but he aspired for something more.
From the us.cnn.com
Not many know that he aspired to becoming an actor but ended up directing music.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Although I now have a high media profile, I never aspired to be a public figure.
From the guardian.co.uk
If he can't handle criticism, he shouldn't have aspired to become a head coach.
From the kentucky.com
He mourned and mocked the decline of the cultural values to which he had aspired.
From the latimes.com
Circa 1900, ambitious photographers aspired to pictures that resembled paintings.
From the time.com
More examples
Draw a bead on: have an ambitious plan or a lofty goal
(aspiring) aspirant: desiring or striving for recognition or advancement
Aspire is a work of art, constructed on the Jubilee Campus of the University of Nottingham, in Nottingham, England. ...
Mount Aspiring/Tititea is New Zealand's highest mountain outside the Aoraki/Mount Cook region.
To hope or dream; especially to hope or work towards a profession or occupation (followed by to as a preposition or infinitive particle)
(aspiring (adj)) Having great ambition to be; desiring strongly
AFEHCT's Administrative Simplification Print Image Research Effort work group.
A classy sporting academy in the Sport City. Tests the whole of Qatar's young population to find the most promising athletes of the future.
Aspire is the business telephone system from NEC for the medium to large organisations. Packed with features and also supports the MyCalls software for call management. More information