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6-letter words containing e, d, w

  • washed — Simple past tense and past participle of wash.
  • wasted — not used or in use: waste energy; waste talents.
  • wauled — Simple past tense and past participle of waul.
  • weaned — Simple past tense and past participle of wean.
  • weared — Simple past tense and past participle of wear.
  • weaved — Simple past tense and past participle of weave (
  • webbed — having the fingers or toes connected by a web or membrane: the webbed foot of a duck or beaver.
  • webfed — (of a printing press) printing from rolls of paper
  • wedded — united in matrimony; married: the wedded couple; a wedded woman.
  • wedeln — a skiing technique first developed in Austria in the 1950s that consists of high-speed turns made in succession with both skis parallel while not noticeably setting the ski edges on a slope.
  • wedged — having the shape of a wedge.
  • wedges — Plural form of wedge.
  • wedgie — Often, wedgies. a shoe with a wedge heel.
  • weeded — a valueless plant growing wild, especially one that grows on cultivated ground to the exclusion or injury of the desired crop.
  • weeder — a person who removes weeds, as from a garden or lawn.
  • weedle — Misspelling of wheedle.
  • weened — Simple past tense and past participle of ween.
  • weeped — Simple past tense and past participle of weep (drainage sense).
  • weirdo — an odd, eccentric, or unconventional person.
  • weirds — Plural form of weird.
  • weirdy — weirdo.
  • weived — Simple past tense and past participle of weive.
  • welded — Simple past tense and past participle of weld.
  • welder — to unite or fuse (as pieces of metal) by hammering, compressing, or the like, especially after rendering soft or pasty by heat, and sometimes with the addition of fusible material like or unlike the pieces to be united.
  • weldon — Fay. born 1931, British novelist and writer. Her novels include Praxis (1978), Life and Loves of a She-Devil (1984), Big Women (1998), and Rhode Island Blues (2003)
  • weldor — to unite or fuse (as pieces of metal) by hammering, compressing, or the like, especially after rendering soft or pasty by heat, and sometimes with the addition of fusible material like or unlike the pieces to be united.
  • welled — a hole drilled or bored into the earth to obtain water, petroleum, natural gas, brine, or sulfur.
  • welted — a ridge or wale on the surface of the body, as from a blow of a stick or whip.
  • wend's — a member of a Slavic people of E Germany; Sorb.
  • wended — to pursue or direct (one's way).
  • wetted — moistened, covered, or soaked with water or some other liquid: wet hands.
  • weyden — Roger or Rogier [Flemish raw-geer] /Flemish rɔˈgir/ (Show IPA), van der [van der;; Flemish vahn duh r] /væn dər;; Flemish vɑn dər/ (Show IPA), 1400?–64, Flemish painter.
  • whaled — any of the larger marine mammals of the order Cetacea, especially as distinguished from the smaller dolphins and porpoises, having a fishlike body, forelimbs modified into flippers, and a head that is horizontally flattened.
  • whiled — a period or interval of time: to wait a long while; He arrived a short while ago.
  • whined — to utter a low, usually nasal, complaining cry or sound, as from uneasiness, discontent, peevishness, etc.: The puppies were whining from hunger.
  • whited — of the color of pure snow, of the margins of this page, etc.; reflecting nearly all the rays of sunlight or a similar light.
  • whored — Simple past tense and past participle of whore.
  • wicked — evil or morally bad in principle or practice; sinful; iniquitous: wicked people; wicked habits.
  • widder — widow.
  • widdie — a band or rope, traditionally one made from intertwined willow twigs.
  • widdle — (chiefly, British) To urinate.
  • widely — to a wide extent.
  • widens — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of widen.
  • widest — having considerable or great extent from side to side; broad: a wide boulevard.
  • widger — (gardening) a small gardening tool used to loosen soil, consisting of a handle and long thin spatula.
  • widget — a small mechanical device, as a knob or switch, especially one whose name is not known or cannot be recalled; gadget: a row of widgets on the instrument panel.
  • widgie — (Australia, slang) A female bodgie.
  • widnes — a city in NW England, just E of Liverpool, on the Mersey River.
  • wields — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of wield.
  • wieldy — readily wielded or managed, as in use or action.
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