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9-letter words containing h, a, w, i

  • wealthier — Comparative form of wealthy.
  • wealthily — In a wealthy way.
  • wear ship — to change the tack of a sailing vessel, esp a square-rigger, by coming about so that the wind passes astern
  • wear thin — 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.
  • weighable — Heavy enough to be weighed.
  • weightman — a person whose work is to weigh goods or merchandise.
  • whale oil — oil rendered from whale blubber, formerly widely used as a fuel for lamps and for making soap and candles.
  • whalelike — Resembling a whale or some aspect of one.
  • whangarei — a port in New Zealand, the northernmost city of North Island: oil refinery. Pop: 72 200 (2004 est)
  • what with — considering
  • wheatbird — A bird that feeds on wheat, especially the chaffinch.
  • whillywha — (Scotland) a flattering deceiver.
  • whim-wham — any odd or fanciful object or thing; a gimcrack.
  • whimsical — given to whimsy or fanciful notions; capricious: a pixyish, whimsical fellow.
  • whip hand — the hand that holds the whip, in driving.
  • whipcrack — The crack of a whip.
  • whipsawed — subjected to a double loss, as when an investor has bought a stock at a high price soon before it declines and then, in order to make good the loss, sells it short before it advances.
  • whipsnake — any of several long, slender New World snakes of the genus Masticophis, the tail of which resembles a whip.
  • whipstaff — a bar attached to a ship's tiller to assist with steering
  • whipstall — a stall during a vertical climb in which the nose of the airplane falls forward and downward in a whiplike movement.
  • whiptails — Plural form of whiptail.
  • whitbread — Fatima. born 1961, British javelin thrower: won gold at the World Championships (1987)
  • white ant — termite
  • white ash — any of various trees of the genus Fraxinus, of the olive family, especially F. excelsior, of Europe and Asia, or F. americana (white ash) of North America, having opposite, pinnate leaves and purplish flowers in small clusters.
  • white hat — a virtuous hero, especially in a cowboy movie; good guy.
  • white oak — a town in central Maryland, near Washington, D.C.
  • white rat — an albino variety of the Norway rat, Rattus norvegicus, used in biological experiments.
  • white sea — an arm of the Arctic Ocean, in the NW Russian Federation in Europe. About 36,000 sq. mi. (93,240 sq. km).
  • white wax — a yellowish-white, somewhat translucent, tasteless solid, prepared by bleaching beeswax, used chiefly in pharmacy.
  • white-ant — to undermine or subvert from within.
  • whiteacre — an arbitrary name for a piece of land used for purposes of supposition in legal argument or the like (often distinguished from blackacre).
  • whitebait — a young sprat or herring.
  • whitebark — The North American pine Pinus albicaulis, found in mountainous and subalpine regions, often as krummholz.
  • whitebass — a freshwater fish, Morone chrysops, of the bass family Moronidae, native to North American lakes and rivers
  • whitebeam — a European tree, Sorbus aria, of the rose family, having leathery leaves, showy, white flowers, and mealy, orange-red or scarlet fruit.
  • whitecaps — Plural form of whitecap.
  • whitecoat — a baby seal, usually less than four weeks old and still having its initial white fur.
  • whitedamp — a poisonous coal-mine gas composed chiefly of carbon monoxide.
  • whiteface — a Hereford.
  • whitehall — Also called Whitehall Palace. a former palace in central London, England, originally built in the reign of Henry III: execution of Charles I, 1649.
  • whiteheadAlfred North, 1861–1947, English philosopher and mathematician, in the U.S. after 1924.
  • whitetail — A deer, Odocoileus virginianus, family Cervidae, perhaps the most popular game animal in North America.
  • whitewall — a rubber tire for an automobile, bicycle, etc., whose sidewall is colored white.
  • whiteware — white earthenware
  • whitewash — a composition, as of lime and water or of whiting, size, and water, used for whitening walls, woodwork, etc.
  • whittakerCharles 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
  • whiz-bang — Military. a small, high-speed shell whose sound as it flies through the air arrives almost at the same instant as its explosion.
  • whizzbang — Military. a small, high-speed shell whose sound as it flies through the air arrives almost at the same instant as its explosion.
  • widthways — Widthwise The direction of the width of an object or place.
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