6-letter words containing w, e, i
- widest — having considerable or great extent from side to side; broad: a wide boulevard.
- widger — (gardening) a small gardening tool used to loosen soil, consisting of a handle and long thin spatula.
- widget — a small mechanical device, as a knob or switch, especially one whose name is not known or cannot be recalled; gadget: a row of widgets on the instrument panel.
- widgie — (Australia, slang) A female bodgie.
- widnes — a city in NW England, just E of Liverpool, on the Mersey River.
- wields — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of wield.
- wieldy — readily wielded or managed, as in use or action.
- wiener — Norbert, 1894–1964, U.S. mathematician: pioneer in cybernetics.
- wienie — Informal. a wiener.
- wiesel — Elie [el-ee] /ˈɛl i/ (Show IPA), (Eliezer) born 1928, U.S. author, born in Romania: Nobel Peace Prize 1986.
- wifely — of, like, or befitting a wife.
- wigeon — widgeon.
- wigged — wearing a wig: The wigged justices entered the courtroom.
- wigger — A white person who tries to emulate or acquire African-American cultural behavior and tastes.
- wiggle — to move or go with short, quick, irregular movements from side to side: The puppies wiggled with delight.
- wiglet — a small wig, especially one used to supplement the existing hair.
- wigner — Eugene Paul, 1902–95, U.S. physicist, born in Hungary: Nobel prize 1963.
- wilded — Simple past tense and past participle of wild.
- wilder — to travel around as a group, attacking or assaulting (people) in a random and violent way: The man was wilded and left for dead.
- wilier — full of, marked by, or proceeding from wiles; crafty; cunning.
- wilkes — Charles, 1798–1877, U.S. rear admiral and explorer.
- willed — having a will (usually used in combination): strong-willed; weak-willed.
- willer — One who wills, who causes by an act of will or willpower.
- willes — Plural form of wille.
- willet — a large, eastern North American shorebird, Catoptrophorus semipalmatus, having a striking black and white wing pattern.
- willey — to willow (cotton).
- willie — William Lee ("Willie") 1931–2003, U.S. jockey.
- wilmer — a male given name.
- wilted — to become limp and drooping, as a fading flower; wither.
- wimble — a device used especially in mining for extracting the rubbish from a bored hole.
- wimped — Simple past tense and past participle of wimp.
- wimper — Misspelling of whimper.
- wimple — a woman's headcloth drawn in folds about the chin, formerly worn out of doors, and still in use by some nuns.
- winced — to draw back or tense the body, as from pain or from a blow; start; flinch.
- wincer — One who, or that which, winces.
- winces — Plural form of wince.
- wincey — Linsey-woolsey.
- winded — out of breath.
- winder — a person or thing that winds.
- windes — Plural form of winde.
- windle — a measure of corn, wheat, or other commodities equal to approximately three bushels, but varying in different regions.
- winery — an establishment for making wine.
- winged — having wings.
- winger — (in Rugby, soccer, etc.) a person who plays a wing position.
- winges — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of winge.
- winier — of, like, or characteristic of wine.
- winked — Simple past tense and past participle of wink.
- winker — a person or thing that winks.
- winkie — (slang) The penis.
- winkle — any of various marine gastropods; periwinkle1 .