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8-letter words containing w, a, n, l

  • allowing — to give permission to or for; permit: to allow a student to be absent; No swimming allowed.
  • ballgown — A ballgown is a long dress that women wear to formal dances.
  • bangalow — an Australian palm, Archontophoenix cunninghamiana, native to New South Wales and Queensland
  • barn owl — any owl of the genus Tyto, esp T. alba, having a pale brown and white plumage, long slender legs, and a heart-shaped face: family Tytonidae
  • brawling — a noisy quarrel, squabble, or fight.
  • bundwall — a concrete or earth wall surrounding a storage tank containing crude oil or its refined product, designed to hold the contents of the tank in the event of a rupture or leak
  • bungalow — A bungalow is a house which has only one level, and no stairs.
  • bungwall — an Australian fern, Blechnum indicum, having an edible rhizome
  • corn law — any of the laws regulating domestic and foreign trading of grain, the last of which was repealed in 1846.
  • cornwall — a former administrative county of SW England; became a unitary authority in 2009: hilly, with a deeply indented coastline. Administrative centre: Truro. Pop: 513 500 (2003 est). Area: 3564 sq km (1376 sq miles)
  • cranwell — a village in E England, in Lincolnshire: Royal Air Force College (1920)
  • crawling — a defect in freshly applied paint or varnish characterized by bare patches and ridging
  • dawdling — proceeding at a slow pace
  • dawnlike — the first appearance of daylight in the morning: Dawn broke over the valley.
  • downfall — descent to a lower position or standing; overthrow; ruin.
  • downhaul — any of various lines for pulling down a sail or a yard, as for securing in a lowered position when not in use.
  • downland — An area of rolling downs, often grassy pasture over chalk or limestone.
  • download — to transfer (software, data, character sets, etc.) from a distant to a nearby computer, from a larger to a smaller computer, or from a computer to a peripheral device.
  • downplay — to treat or speak of (something) so as to reduce emphasis on its importance, value, strength, etc.: The press has downplayed the president's role in the negotiations.
  • drawling — an act or utterance of a person who drawls.
  • drawlink — (rail transport) drawbar.
  • enwallow — to plunge or roll around in
  • fowliang — Older Spelling. former name of Jingdezhen.
  • gnawable — Capable of being gnawed.
  • gun laws — laws relating to the possession and use of guns
  • gunwales — Plural form of gunwale.
  • gunwhale — Misspelling of gunwale.
  • hawkling — A small, young, or immature hawk.
  • inwardly — in or on, or with reference to, the inside or inner part; internally.
  • jawlines — Plural form of jawline.
  • john law — Andrew Bonar [bon-er] /ˈbɒn ər/ (Show IPA), 1858–1923, English statesman, born in Canada: prime minister 1922–23.
  • know-all — a know-it-all.
  • knowable — capable of being known.
  • lacewing — any of several insects of the family Chrysopidae, having delicate, lacelike wings and golden or copper-colored eyes, the larvae of which are predaceous on aphids and other small insects.
  • landward — Also, landwards. toward the land or interior.
  • landwash — the foreshore, especially that part between high and low tidemarks.
  • landwehr — (in Germany, Austria, etc.) the part of the organized military forces of a nation that has completed a certain amount of compulsory training, and whose continuous service is required only in time of war.
  • lane-way — a lane
  • laneways — Plural form of laneway.
  • lapwings — Plural form of lapwing.
  • law-hand — a style of handwriting used in old legal documents, especially in England.
  • lawndale — a city in SW California, near Los Angeles.
  • lawnlike — Resembling or characteristic of a lawn.
  • lawrence — D(avid) H(erbert) 1885–1930, English novelist.
  • lay down — to put or place in a horizontal position or position of rest; set down: to lay a book on a desk.
  • laywoman — a woman who is not a member of the clergy.
  • laywomen — a woman who is not a member of the clergy.
  • lindwall — Ray(mond Russell). 1921–96, Australian cricketer. A fast bowler, he played for Australia 61 times between 1946 and 1958
  • loanword — a word in one language that has been borrowed from another language and usually naturalized, as wine, taken into Old English from Latin vinum, or macho, taken into Modern English from Spanish.
  • longwall — noting or pertaining to a means of extracting coal or other minerals in an underground mine from a continuous face, the roof before the face being supported at intervals by temporary or movable artificial supports. Compare room-and-pillar.

On this page, we collect all 8-letter words with W-A-N-L. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 8-letter word that contains in W-A-N-L to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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