8-letter words containing w, e, g, n
- westings — Plural form of westing.
- westling — (obsolete) A westerner.
- whangees — Plural form of whangee.
- wheeling — a circular frame or disk arranged to revolve on an axis, as on or in vehicles or machinery.
- wheezing — The quality or symptom of breathing with an audible wheeze.
- whelming — to submerge; engulf.
- whelping — Present participle of whelp.
- whetting — to sharpen (a knife, tool, etc.) by grinding or friction.
- whingers — Plural form of whinger.
- widening — Of things that are growing wider.
- widgeons — Plural form of widgeon.
- wielding — to exercise (power, authority, influence, etc.), as in ruling or dominating.
- windages — Plural form of windage.
- wine gum — any of a variety of gumdrops coloured and flavoured to suggest types of wines but containing no alcohol
- wingbeat — One complete set of motions of a wing in flying.
- wingedly — in a winged manner, as if furnished with wings
- wingless — having no wings.
- winglike — resembling a wing.
- wingmate — Alternative form of wingman.
- wingover — an airplane maneuver involving a steep, climbing turn to a near stall, then a sharp drop of the nose, a removal of bank, and a final leveling off in the opposite direction.
- winnipeg — a province in central Canada. 246,512 sq. mi. (638,466 sq. km). Abbreviation: Man. Capital: Winnipeg.
- wiseling — someone who claims to be wise; a wiseacre
- wizening — Present participle of wizen.
- wobegone — woebegone.
- wrangell — Mount, an active volcano in SE Alaska, in the Wrangell Mountains. 14,006 feet (4269 meters).
- wrangled — to argue or dispute, especially in a noisy or angry manner.
- wrangler — a cowboy, especially one in charge of saddle horses.
- wrangles — Plural form of wrangle.
- wreaking — to inflict or execute (punishment, vengeance, etc.): They wreaked havoc on the enemy.
- wrecking — any building, structure, or thing reduced to a state of ruin.
- wresting — Present participle of wrest.
- wringers — Plural form of wringer.
- wrongest — not in accordance with what is morally right or good: a wrong deed.