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9-letter words containing w, e, i, l

  • weighable — Heavy enough to be weighed.
  • weightily — In a weighty manner; ponderously; forcibly.
  • welcoming — a kindly greeting or reception, as to one whose arrival gives pleasure: to give someone a warm welcome.
  • welfarism — the set of attitudes and policies characterizing or tending toward the establishment of a welfare state.
  • welfarist — the set of attitudes and policies characterizing or tending toward the establishment of a welfare state.
  • welfarite — a person who is on welfare
  • well-knit — closely joined together or related; firmly constructed: a well-knit society; a well-knit plot; a muscular, well-knit body.
  • well-nigh — very nearly; almost: It's well-nigh bedtime.
  • well-paid — a simple past tense and past participle of pay1 .
  • wellbeing — a good or satisfactory condition of existence; a state characterized by health, happiness, and prosperity; welfare: to influence the well-being of the nation and its people.
  • welldoing — good conduct or action.
  • wellpoint — a perforated tube driven into the ground to collect water from the surrounding area so that it can be pumped away, as to prevent an excavation from filling with ground water.
  • weltering — to roll, toss, or heave, as waves or the sea.
  • werelions — Plural form of werelion.
  • west linn — a town in NW Oregon.
  • westfield — a city in S Massachusetts.
  • whale oil — oil rendered from whale blubber, formerly widely used as a fuel for lamps and for making soap and candles.
  • whalelike — Resembling a whale or some aspect of one.
  • wheedling — to endeavor to influence (a person) by smooth, flattering, or beguiling words or acts: We wheedled him incessantly, but he would not consent.
  • wheelings — Plural form of wheeling.
  • wheelspin — the spinning of a wheel, especially that of a drive wheel of a powered vehicle that has poor traction.
  • whifflery — frivolity
  • whirlbone — Alternative form of whirl-bone.
  • whistlers — Plural form of whistler.
  • white lie — a minor, polite, or harmless lie; fib.
  • white owl — snowy owl
  • whitehall — Also called Whitehall Palace. a former palace in central London, England, originally built in the reign of Henry III: execution of Charles I, 1649.
  • whiteline — codline.
  • whitelist — a list of novels, motion pictures, etc., deemed suitable for juveniles, members of a particular faith, or other specified groups of individuals.
  • whitetail — A deer, Odocoileus virginianus, family Cervidae, perhaps the most popular game animal in North America.
  • whitewall — a rubber tire for an automobile, bicycle, etc., whose sidewall is colored white.
  • wholetime — full-time.
  • wickliffeJohn, c1320–84, English theologian, religious reformer, and Biblical translator.
  • wieldable — Capable of being wielded.
  • wieldless — not capable of being handled; unwieldy
  • wilburite — a member of a conservative body of Quakers formed in 1845 in protest against the evangelicalism of the Gurneyites.
  • wild bean — groundnut (def 1).
  • wild date — a feather palm, Phoenix sylvestris, of India, having drooping, bluish-green or grayish leaves and small, orange-yellow fruit.
  • wild pear — a wild variety of pear, especially Pyrus pyraster or Pyrus caucasica
  • wild rice — a tall aquatic grass, Zizania aquatica, of northeastern North America.
  • wild rose — any native species of rose, usually having a single flower with the corolla consisting of one circle of five roundish, spreading petals.
  • wild type — an organism having an appearance that is characteristic of the species in a natural breeding population.
  • wild west — the western frontier region of the U.S., before the establishment of stable government.
  • wild-eyed — having an angry, insane, or distressed expression in the eyes.
  • wildering — (botany) A plant growing in a state of nature, especially one that has run wild or escaped from cultivation.
  • wildfires — Plural form of wildfire.
  • wild_life — Logic, Inheritance, Functions and Equations parts: interpreter, manual, tests, libraries, examples Paradise Project, DEC Paris Research Laboratory. LIFE is an experimental programming language with a powerful facility for structured type inheritance. It reconciles styles from functional programming, logic programming, and object-oriented programming. LIFE implements a constraint logic programming language with equality (unification) and entailment (matching) constraints over order-sorted feature terms. The Wild_LIFE interpreter has a comfortable user interface with incremental query extension ability. It contains an extensive set of built-in operations as well as an X Windows interface. A semantic superset of LOGIN and LeFun. Syntax is similar to prolog. Mailing list: [email protected] E-mail: Peter Van Roy <[email protected]>
  • wile away — to while away (time, etc.)
  • wilhelm i — William I (def 3).
  • will-less — having or exerting no will: a timid, will-less little man.
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