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7-letter words containing l, w, e

  • wealths — a great quantity or store of money, valuable possessions, property, or other riches: the wealth of a city.
  • wealthy — having great wealth; rich; affluent: a wealthy person; a wealthy nation.
  • wearily — physically or mentally exhausted by hard work, exertion, strain, etc.; fatigued; tired: weary eyes; a weary brain.
  • weasels — Plural form of weasel.
  • weasely — Devious; misleading.
  • web pal — a person one meets and corresponds with over the internet
  • weblike — something formed by or as if by weaving or interweaving.
  • weblink — A web address; the address of a document or resource on the World Wide Web.
  • weblish — the shorthand form of English that is used in text messaging, chat rooms, etc
  • weblogs — Plural form of weblog.
  • webmail — E-mail that is available for use online and stored in the Internet server mailbox, and that is not downloaded to an e-mail program or used offline.
  • wedlock — the state of marriage; matrimony.
  • weekleyErnest, 1865–1954, English etymologist and lexicographer.
  • weelkes — Thomas. ?1575–1623, English composer of madrigals
  • weepily — In a weepy manner.
  • weevils — Plural form of weevil.
  • weevily — infested with weevils.
  • weigela — any of various shrubby, eastern Asian plants belonging to the genus Weigela, of the honeysuckle family, having funnel-shaped white, pink, or crimson flowers.
  • weirdly — involving or suggesting the supernatural; unearthly or uncanny: a weird sound; weird lights.
  • welched — welsh.
  • welcher — welsh.
  • welches — Plural form of welch.
  • welcome — a kindly greeting or reception, as to one whose arrival gives pleasure: to give someone a warm welcome.
  • welders — Plural form of welder.
  • welding — 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.
  • 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.
  • well in — on good terms or favourably placed (with)
  • welland — a city in SE Ontario, in S Canada, on the Welland Ship Canal.
  • wellest — Superlative form of well.
  • wellesz — Egon [ey-gohn] /ˈeɪ goʊn/ (Show IPA), 1885–1974, Austrian musicologist and composer.
  • wellies — Usually, wellies. Wellington boot.
  • welling — a hole drilled or bored into the earth to obtain water, petroleum, natural gas, brine, or sulfur.
  • welshed — to cheat by failing to pay a gambling debt: You aren't going to welsh on me, are you?
  • welsher — to cheat by failing to pay a gambling debt: You aren't going to welsh on me, are you?
  • welshes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of welsh.
  • welters — Plural form of welter.
  • welting — a ridge or wale on the surface of the body, as from a blow of a stick or whip.
  • wembley — a former borough, now part of Brent, in SE England, near London.
  • wendell — a male given name.
  • wergeld — (in Anglo-Saxon England and other Germanic countries)
  • wergild — (in Anglo-Saxon England and other Germanic countries)
  • werwolf — werewolf.
  • weslaco — a city in S Texas.
  • wet fly — an artificial fly designed for use underwater.
  • wetland — Often, wetlands. land that has a wet and spongy soil, as a marsh, swamp, or bog.
  • whalers — Plural form of whaler.
  • whalery — the whaling industry
  • whample — a stroke; blow
  • wheedle — to endeavor to influence (a person) by smooth, flattering, or beguiling words or acts: We wheedled him incessantly, but he would not consent.
  • wheeled — equipped with or having wheels (often used in combination): a four-wheeled carriage.
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