7-letter words containing w, d, a
- wangled — Simple past tense and past participle of wangle.
- want ad — classified ad.
- wappend — fatigued; tired
- warbird — a vintage military aeroplane
- warbled — Past participle of warble.
- wardens — Plural form of warden.
- warders — Plural form of warder.
- warding — a division or district of a city or town, as for administrative or political purposes.
- warhead — the forward section of a self-propelled missile, bomb, torpedo, or the like, containing the explosive, chemical, or atomic charge.
- warlord — a military leader, especially of a warlike nation.
- washday — the day set apart in a household for washing clothes: Monday is always washday at our house.
- waspdom — The state or essence of being a wasp.
- watched — to be alertly on the lookout, look attentively, or observe, as to see what comes, is done, or happens: to watch while an experiment is performed.
- watered — of or relating to water in any way: a water journey.
- watford — a city in Hertfordshire, SE England, N of London.
- wattled — Having a wattle.
- wavered — Simple past tense and past participle of waver.
- waxweed — any of various flowering plants belonging to the genus Cuphea
- waylaid — simple past tense and past participle of waylay.
- wayland — a city in NE Massachusetts.
- wayside — the side of the way; land immediately adjacent to a road, highway, path, etc.; roadside.
- wayward — turned or turning away from what is right or proper; willful; disobedient: a wayward son; wayward behavior.
- wearied — physically or mentally exhausted by hard work, exertion, strain, etc.; fatigued; tired: weary eyes; a weary brain.
- weasand — throat.
- webhead — (slang) An avid user of the World Wide Web.
- weekday — any day of the week except Sunday or, often, Saturday and Sunday.
- weidman — Charles Edward, Jr. 1901–75, U.S. dancer, choreographer, and teacher.
- welland — a city in SE Ontario, in S Canada, on the Welland Ship Canal.
- wet amd — a form of age-related macular degeneration in which blood vessels grow abnormally under the macula lutea
- wetland — Often, wetlands. land that has a wet and spongy soil, as a marsh, swamp, or bog.
- weygand — Maxime [mak-seem] /makˈsim/ (Show IPA), 1867–1965, French general.
- whacked — exhausted; tired out.
- whammed — Simple past tense and past participle of wham.
- whanged — Simple past tense and past participle of whang.
- whapped — Simple past tense and past participle of whap.
- wideman — John Edgar, born 1941, U.S. novelist.
- wieland — Christoph Martin [kris-tawf mahr-teen] /ˈkrɪs tɔf ˈmɑr tin/ (Show IPA), 1733–1813, German poet, novelist, and critic.
- wildcat — any of several North American felines of the genus Lynx. Compare lynx.
- wildean — of, pertaining to, characteristic of, or resembling the literary style of Oscar Wilde.
- wildman — A savage person without culture.
- willard — Emma (Hart) 1787–1870, U.S. educator and poet.
- windage — the influence of the wind in deflecting a missile.
- windaus — Adolf [ah-dawlf] /ˈɑ dɔlf/ (Show IPA), 1876–1959, German chemist: Nobel prize 1928.
- windbag — Informal. an empty, voluble, pretentious talker.
- windham — a town in NE Connecticut.
- windway — a passage for air.
- winnard — a heron
- wirilda — an acacia tree, Acacia retinoides, of SE Australia with edible seeds
- wizards — Plural form of wizard.
- wizzard — Obsolete spelling of wizard.