6-letter words containing e, w, a
- watter — a light bulb, radio station, etc., of specified wattage (usually used in combination): This lamp takes a 60-watter.
- wattle — Often, wattles. a number of rods or stakes interwoven with twigs or tree branches for making fences, walls, etc.
- wauker — a person who wauks cloth
- wauled — Simple past tense and past participle of waul.
- wavell — Archibald Percival, 1st Earl, 1883–1950, British field marshal and author: viceroy of India 1943–47.
- wavers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of waver.
- wavery — Tending to waver; uncertain or hesitant.
- wavier — curving alternately in opposite directions; undulating: a wavy course; wavy hair.
- wavies — wavey.
- waxeth — (obsolete) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of wax.
- waxier — Comparative form of waxy.
- wałęsa — Lech (lɛç). born 1943, Polish statesman: president of Poland (1990–95); leader of the independent trade union Solidarity 1980–90; Nobel peace prize 1983
- weaken — to make weak or weaker.
- weaker — not strong; liable to yield, break, or collapse under pressure or strain; fragile; frail: a weak fortress; a weak spot in armor.
- weakly — weak or feeble in constitution; not robust; sickly.
- weakon — a subatomic particle
- wealth — a great quantity or store of money, valuable possessions, property, or other riches: the wealth of a city.
- weaned — Simple past tense and past participle of wean.
- weanel — a recently weaned child or animal
- weaner — a recently weaned animal.
- weapon — any instrument or device for use in attack or defense in combat, fighting, or war, as a sword, rifle, or cannon.
- weared — Simple past tense and past participle of wear.
- wearer — to carry or have on the body or about the person as a covering, equipment, ornament, or the like: to wear a coat; to wear a saber; to wear a disguise.
- weasal — Misspelling of weasel.
- weasel — any small carnivore of the genus Mustela, of the family Mustelidae, having a long, slender body and feeding chiefly on small rodents.
- weaved — Simple past tense and past participle of weave (
- weaver — James Baird, 1833–1912, U.S. politician: congressman 1879–81, 1885–89.
- weaves — Plural form of weave.
- webapp — a software program that provides interactive functionality and is accessed through a web browser and URL.
- webcam — a digital camera whose images are transmitted, often in real time, over the World Wide Web.
- webmag — A magazine that is only published on the Internet.
- weihai — a seaport in NE Shandong province, in E China: district leased to Great Britain 1898–1930. 285 sq. mi. (738 sq. km).
- weimar — a city in Thuringia, in central Germany.
- wejack — fisher (def 3).
- westar — one of a series of privately owned geostationary communications satellites that service commercial users in the U.S.
- 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.
- whalen — Philip, 1923–2002, U.S. poet.
- whaler — a person or vessel employed in whaling.
- whales — Bay of, an inlet of the Ross Sea, in Antarctica: location of Little America.
- wharve — Spinning. a wheel or round piece of wood on a spindle, serving as a flywheel or as a pulley.
- whaten — what; what kind of
- whater — the true nature or identity of something, or the sum of its characteristics: a lecture on the whats and hows of crop rotation.
- wheals — Plural form of wheal.
- wheaty — having a wheat-like taste
- whenas — when; whenever
- whenua — land
- woaded — dyed or colored blue with woad.
- womera — woomera.
- wrappe — Obsolete spelling of wrap.
- wrasse — any of various marine fishes of the family Labridae, especially of the genus Labrus, having thick, fleshy lips, powerful teeth, and usually a brilliant color, certain species being valued as food fishes.