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8-letter words containing a, l, e, w

  • twinleaf — a North American herb, Jeffersonia diphylla, having a single white blossom and leaves divided in two.
  • unclawed — not mauled, scratched, or otherwise damaged by claws
  • unflawed — perfect
  • unwalked — to advance or travel on foot at a moderate speed or pace; proceed by steps; move by advancing the feet alternately so that there is always one foot on the ground in bipedal locomotion and two or more feet on the ground in quadrupedal locomotion.
  • unwalled — not surrounded by walls, not having or protected by walls
  • unwarely — unwarily or incautiously; carelessly
  • viewable — capable of being viewed; visible.
  • wadeable — that can be waded: a wadable stream.
  • wageless — Often, wages. money that is paid or received for work or services, as by the hour, day, or week. Compare living wage, minimum wage.
  • waiflike — Resembling a waif; apparently homeless, starving, etc.
  • wailsome — wailful.
  • wakeless — (of sleep) sound; deep: He lay in wakeless sleep.
  • waldheimKurt [kurt;; German koo rt] /kɜrt;; German kʊərt/ (Show IPA), 1918–2007, Austrian diplomat: secretary-general of the United Nations 1972–82; president of Austria 1986–92.
  • walkable — capable of being traveled, crossed, or covered by walking: a walkable road; a walkable distance.
  • walkless — (baseball) Without a walk.
  • walkover — Racing. a walking or trotting over the course by a contestant who is the only starter.
  • walkyrie — Valkyrie.
  • wall rue — a small, delicate fern, Asplenium rutamuraria, having fan-shaped leaflets and growing on walls and cliffs.
  • wallasey — a city in Merseyside, in W England, on the Mersey estuary, opposite Liverpool.
  • wallendaKarl [kahrl;; German kahrl] /kɑrl;; German kɑrl/ (Show IPA), 1905–78, German circus aerialist.
  • walleyed — having eyes in which there is an abnormal amount of the white showing, because of divergent strabismus.
  • walleyes — Plural form of walleye.
  • walloped — to beat soundly; thrash.
  • walloper — to beat soundly; thrash.
  • wallowed — Simple past tense and past participle of wallow.
  • wallower — a person or thing that wallows.
  • wallsend — a city in Tyne and Wear, NE England, near the mouth of the Tyne River.
  • walruses — Plural form of walrus.
  • waltzers — Plural form of waltzer.
  • wantless — (archaic) Having no want; abundant; fruitful.
  • warblers — Plural form of warbler.
  • wareless — careless
  • warfieldDavid, 1866–1951, U.S. actor.
  • warhable — able to fight in war
  • warplane — an airplane designed for, or used in, warfare.
  • wartless — Without warts.
  • washable — capable of being washed without shrinking, fading, or the like.
  • wasplike — any of numerous social or solitary hymenopterous insects of the Vespidae, Sphecidae, and allied families, generally having a long, slender body and narrow waist and, in the female, a stinger.
  • wasteful — given to or characterized by useless consumption or expenditure: wasteful methods; a wasteful way of life.
  • wastelot — a vacant lot, especially one overgrown with weeds or covered with rubbish.
  • wastrels — Plural form of wastrel.
  • waterily — In a watery manner.
  • waterlog — to cause (a boat, ship, etc.) to become uncontrollable as a result of flooding.
  • waterloo — a village in central Belgium, south of Brussels: Napoleon decisively defeated here on June 18, 1815.
  • wattless — using no power
  • waveless — Free from waves.
  • wavelets — Plural form of wavelet.
  • wavelike — a disturbance on the surface of a liquid body, as the sea or a lake, in the form of a moving ridge or swell.
  • waverley — a city in New South Wales, SE Australia, near Sydney.
  • wayleave — a right of way over or under another's ground or property, as for transporting minerals from a mine.
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