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7-letter words containing l, e, w, r

  • roswell — a city in SE New Mexico.
  • rowable — able to be rowed
  • roweled — a small wheel with radiating points, forming the extremity of a spur.
  • scowler — to draw down or contract the brows in a sullen, displeased, or angry manner.
  • swelter — to suffer from oppressive heat.
  • sweltry — hot, sizzling, roasting; sweltering.
  • trawler — a person who trawls.
  • twelver — Imamite.
  • twirler — a person or thing that twirls.
  • waddler — One who waddles.
  • waffler — to speak or write equivocally: to waffle on an important issue.
  • waggler — a float only the bottom of which is attached to the line
  • walkers — Plural form of walker.
  • walkure — See The Ring of the Nibelung.
  • walters — Bruno [broo-noh] /ˈbru noʊ/ (Show IPA), (Bruno Schlesinger) 1876–1962, German opera and symphony conductor, in U.S. after 1939.
  • waltzer — a ballroom dance, in moderately fast triple meter, in which the dancers revolve in perpetual circles, taking one step to each beat.
  • wangler — A person who wangles.
  • warbled — Past participle of warble.
  • warbler — any of several small, chiefly Old World songbirds of the subfamily Sylviidae. Compare blackcap (def 1), reed warbler.
  • warbles — Plural form of warble.
  • wareful — (obsolete) wary; watchful; cautious.
  • warless — unmarked by war: The international conflict was followed by a warless decade.
  • warlike — fit, qualified, or ready for war; martial: a warlike fleet; warlike tribes.
  • warsler — a wrestler
  • wastrel — a wasteful person; spendthrift.
  • wearily — physically or mentally exhausted by hard work, exertion, strain, etc.; fatigued; tired: weary eyes; a weary brain.
  • weirdly — involving or suggesting the supernatural; unearthly or uncanny: a weird sound; weird lights.
  • welcher — welsh.
  • welders — Plural form of welder.
  • welfare — the good fortune, health, happiness, prosperity, etc., of a person, group, or organization; well-being: to look after a child's welfare; the physical or moral welfare of society.
  • welsher — to cheat by failing to pay a gambling debt: You aren't going to welsh on me, are you?
  • welters — Plural form of welter.
  • wergeld — (in Anglo-Saxon England and other Germanic countries)
  • wergild — (in Anglo-Saxon England and other Germanic countries)
  • werwolf — werewolf.
  • whalers — Plural form of whaler.
  • whalery — the whaling industry
  • wheelerBurton Kendall, 1882–1975, U.S. political leader.
  • whilere — a while ago
  • whirled — Simple past tense and past participle of whirl.
  • whirler — A person who, or thing that whirls.
  • whorled — having a whorl or whorls.
  • whortle — the whortleberry.
  • wielder — to exercise (power, authority, influence, etc.), as in ruling or dominating.
  • wiggler — a person or thing that wiggles.
  • wilbert — a masculine name
  • wilfred — a male given name: from Old English words meaning “will” and “peace.”.
  • willers — Plural form of willer.
  • winkler — a person who gathers periwinkles
  • wirable — able to be wired
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