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6-letter words containing w, a, r, e

  • swager — a tool for bending cold metal to a required shape.
  • sweary — characterized by or involving the use of swearwords
  • tawery — a place where the tawing of skins is carried out
  • unware — unwary or incautious; careless
  • wacker — wacko.
  • wadder — a small mass, lump, or ball of anything: a wad of paper; a wad of tobacco.
  • waders — a person or thing that wades.
  • wafers — Plural form of wafer.
  • wafter — to carry lightly and smoothly through the air or over water: The gentle breeze wafted the sound of music to our ears.
  • wagers — Plural form of wager.
  • wagger — to move from side to side, forward and backward, or up and down, especially rapidly and repeatedly: a dog wagging its tail.
  • wagner — Honus [hoh-nuh s] /ˈhoʊ nəs/ (Show IPA), (John Peter) 1874–1955, U.S. baseball player.
  • wailer — to utter a prolonged, inarticulate, mournful cry, usually high-pitched or clear-sounding, as in grief or suffering: to wail with pain.
  • waired — Simple past tense and past participle of wair.
  • waiter — a person, especially a man, who waits on tables, as in a restaurant.
  • waiver — an intentional relinquishment of some right, interest, or the like.
  • walers — Plural form of waler.
  • walkerAlice, born 1944, U.S. novelist and short-story writer.
  • waller — any of various permanent upright constructions having a length much greater than the thickness and presenting a continuous surface except where pierced by doors, windows, etc.: used for shelter, protection, or privacy, or to subdivide interior space, to support floors, roofs, or the like, to retain earth, to fence in an area, etc.
  • walter — Bruno [broo-noh] /ˈbru noʊ/ (Show IPA), (Bruno Schlesinger) 1876–1962, German opera and symphony conductor, in U.S. after 1939.
  • wander — to ramble without a definite purpose or objective; roam, rove, or stray: to wander over the earth.
  • wanger — (obsolete) A rest or cushion for the cheek; a pillow.
  • wanier — Also, waney. waning; decreasing; diminished in part.
  • wanker — a contemptible person; jerk.
  • wanner — Comparative form of wan.
  • wanter — One who wants, or who wants something.
  • wapper — (UK, dialect) A gudgeon.
  • warble — to sing or whistle with trills, quavers, or melodic embellishments: The canary warbled most of the day.
  • warded — having notches, slots, or wards, as in locks and keys.
  • warden — any of several pears having a crisp, firm flesh, used in cookery.
  • warder — a truncheon or staff of office or authority, used in giving signals.
  • warely — (obsolete) Watchfully; with caution.
  • warier — watchful; being on one's guard against danger.
  • warine — (zoology) A South American monkey, one of the sapajous.
  • warley — an industrial town in W central England, in Sandwell unitary authority, West Midlands: formed in 1966 by the amalgamation of Smethwick, Oldbury, and Rowley Regis. Pop: 189 854 (2001)
  • warmed — Simple past tense and past participle of warm.
  • warmer — having or giving out a moderate degree of heat, as perceived by the senses: a warm bath.
  • warned — Simple past tense and past participle of warn.
  • warner — Charles Dudley [duhd-lee] /ˈdʌd li/ (Show IPA), 1829–1900, U.S. editor and essayist.
  • warped — to bend or twist out of shape, especially from a straight or flat form, as timbers or flooring.
  • warper — a person or thing that warps.
  • warred — a conflict carried on by force of arms, as between nations or between parties within a nation; warfare, as by land, sea, or air.
  • warrenEarl, 1891–1974, U.S. lawyer and political leader: chief justice of the U.S. 1953–69.
  • warsle — wrestle
  • warted — a small, often hard, abnormal elevation on the skin, usually caused by a papomavirus.
  • washer — the act or process of washing with water or other liquid: to give the car a wash.
  • waster — a person or thing that wastes time, money, etc.
  • waters — a transparent, odorless, tasteless liquid, a compound of hydrogen and oxygen, H 2 O, freezing at 32°F or 0°C and boiling at 212°F or 100°C, that in a more or less impure state constitutes rain, oceans, lakes, rivers, etc.: it contains 11.188 percent hydrogen and 88.812 percent oxygen, by weight.
  • watery — pertaining to or connected with water: watery Neptune.
  • watter — a light bulb, radio station, etc., of specified wattage (usually used in combination): This lamp takes a 60-watter.
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