7-letter words containing w, a, l
- wadable — that can be waded: a wadable stream.
- waddled — to walk with short steps, swaying or rocking from side to side, as a duck.
- waddler — One who waddles.
- waddles — Plural form of waddle.
- waffled — to talk foolishly or without purpose; idle away time talking.
- waffler — to speak or write equivocally: to waffle on an important issue.
- waffles — Plural form of waffle.
- waggled — Simple past tense and past participle of waggle.
- waggler — a float only the bottom of which is attached to the line
- waggles — Plural form of waggle.
- wagtail — any of numerous small, chiefly Old World birds of the family Motacillidae, having a slender body with a long, narrow tail that is habitually wagged up and down.
- wailful — mournful; plaintive.
- wailing — to utter a prolonged, inarticulate, mournful cry, usually high-pitched or clear-sounding, as in grief or suffering: to wail with pain.
- wailuku — a town on NW Maui, in central Hawaii.
- wakeful — unable to sleep; not sleeping; indisposed to sleep: Excitement made the children wakeful.
- walcott — Derek, born 1930, West Indian poet and playwright: Nobel prize 1992.
- walk it — to win easily
- walk on — Also called walking part. a small part in a play or other entertainment, especially one without speaking lines. Compare bit2 (def 6).
- walk-in — of or relating to persons who walk into a place from the street, especially irregularly or without an appointment: walk-in customers; walk-in sales; a walk-in patient.
- walk-on — Also called walking part. a small part in a play or other entertainment, especially one without speaking lines. Compare bit2 (def 6).
- walk-up — an apartment above the ground floor in a building that has no elevator.
- walkers — Plural form of walker.
- walketh — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of walk.
- walkies — the act of taking a dog for a walk
- walking — considered as a person who can or does walk or something that walks: The hospital is caring for six walking patients. He's walking proof that people can lose weight quickly.
- walkman — A Walkman is a small cassette player with light headphones which people carry around so that they can listen to music, for example while they are travelling.
- walkout — a strike by workers.
- walkups — Plural form of walkup.
- walkure — See The Ring of the Nibelung.
- walkway — any passage for walking, especially one connecting the various areas of a ship, factory, park, etc.
- wall in — enclose
- wall up — If someone walls up a room, or if someone is walled up in it, walls are built blocking every door so that nobody can get in or out.
- wallaba — any of several trees belonging to the genus Eperua, of the legume family, native to the Guianas and northern Brazil.
- wallaby — any of various small and medium-sized kangaroos of the genera Macropus, Thylogale, Petrogale, etc., some of which are no larger than rabbits: several species are endangered.
- wallace — Alfred Russel [ruhs-uh l] /ˈrʌs əl/ (Show IPA), 1823–1913, English naturalist, explorer, and author.
- wallach — Otto [ot-oh;; German awt-oh] /ˈɒt oʊ;; German ˈɔt oʊ/ (Show IPA), 1847–1931, German chemist: Nobel prize 1910.
- wallahs — Plural form of wallah.
- wallets — Plural form of wallet.
- walleye — Also called walleyed pike, jack salmon. a large game fish, Stizostedion vitreum, inhabiting the lakes and rivers of northeastern North America; pikeperch.
- wallies — Plural form of wally.
- walling — Present participle of wall.
- walloon — one of a people inhabiting chiefly the southern and southeastern parts of Belgium and adjacent regions in France.
- wallops — Plural form of wallop.
- wallows — Plural form of wallow.
- walnuts — Plural form of walnut.
- walpole — Horace, 4th Earl of Orford [awr-ferd] /ˈɔr fərd/ (Show IPA), (Horatio Walpole) 1717–97, English novelist and essayist (son of Sir Robert Walpole).
- walsall — a city in West Midlands, in central England, near Birmingham.
- walters — Bruno [broo-noh] /ˈbru noʊ/ (Show IPA), (Bruno Schlesinger) 1876–1962, German opera and symphony conductor, in U.S. after 1939.
- waltham — a city in E Massachusetts.
- waltzed — Simple past tense and past participle of waltz.