9-letter words containing e, a, r, w
- wearisome — causing weariness; fatiguing: a difficult and wearisome march.
- wearproof — resistant to damage or deterioration by normal use or wear.
- weaseller — someone who weasels out of a commitment or responsibility
- weathered — seasoned or otherwise affected by exposure to the weather.
- weatherly — (of a ship or boat) making very little leeway when close-hauled.
- web frame — a deep transverse frame reinforcing the hull of a ship.
- webcaster — A person or organization that transmits a webcast over the Internet.
- webmaster — a person who designs or maintains a website.
- weedeater — A string trimmer.
- wehrmacht — the German armed forces of the years prior to and during World War II.
- welfarism — the set of attitudes and policies characterizing or tending toward the establishment of a welfare state.
- welfarist — the set of attitudes and policies characterizing or tending toward the establishment of a welfare state.
- welfarite — a person who is on welfare
- well-read — having read extensively (sometimes followed by in): well-read in oceanography.
- wellanear — alas!
- werehyena — A mythological or folkloric shapeshifter capable of assuming the shape of a hyena.
- wergeland — Henrik Arnold. 1808–45, Norwegian poet and nationalist, remembered for his lyric and narrative verse
- wernerian — pertaining to or characteristic of the views or the classificatory system of Alfred Werner.
- werowance — (historical) A chief of an American Indian tribe in colonial Virginia and Maryland.
- westwards — Westward.
- wet dream — nocturnal emission.
- whangarei — a port in New Zealand, the northernmost city of North Island: oil refinery. Pop: 72 200 (2004 est)
- whateffer — Eye dialect of whatever.
- wheatbird — A bird that feeds on wheat, especially the chaffinch.
- wheatgerm — Wheatgerm is the middle part of a grain of wheat which is rich in vitamins and is often added to other food.
- wheatworm — a small nematode, Tylenchus tritici, that stunts growth and disrupts seed production in wheat.
- whitbread — Fatima. born 1961, British javelin thrower: won gold at the World Championships (1987)
- white rat — an albino variety of the Norway rat, Rattus norvegicus, used in biological experiments.
- whiteacre — an arbitrary name for a piece of land used for purposes of supposition in legal argument or the like (often distinguished from blackacre).
- whitebark — The North American pine Pinus albicaulis, found in mountainous and subalpine regions, often as krummholz.
- whiteware — white earthenware
- whittaker — Charles Evans, 1901–73, U.S. jurist: associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court 1957–62.
- whittawer — a person who converts skins into white leather; a tawer
- who cares — I don't care
- wigmakers — Plural form of wigmaker.
- wild pear — a wild variety of pear, especially Pyrus pyraster or Pyrus caucasica
- windbreak — a growth of trees, a structure of boards, or the like, serving as a shelter from the wind.
- wine rack — a framework for holding a number of bottles of wine in a horizontal position
- winemaker — an expert in the production of wines.
- wiredrawn — drawn out long and thin like a wire.
- wireframe — a visual representation of the structure of a web page
- wiregrass — any of various grasses, such as Bermuda grass, that have tough wiry roots or rhizomes
- wiseacres — Plural form of wiseacre.
- wisecrack — a smart or facetious remark.
- wisterias — Plural form of wisteria.
- womaniser — Non-Oxford British standard spelling of womanizer.
- womanizer — a philanderer.
- woomerang — boomerang.
- word game — any game or contest involving skill in using, forming, guessing, or changing words or expressions, such as anagrams or Scrabble.
- wordbreak — the point at which a word is divided when it runs over from one line of print to the next