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7-letter words containing w, e, l, a

  • legwear — Hosiery.
  • lewisia — any of various perennial herbs of the genus Lewisia of the family Portulacaceae, which are native to western North America and which have pink or white flowers
  • lifeway — a way of life; a manner of living.
  • malware — software intended to damage a computer, mobile device, computer system, or computer network, or to take partial control over its operation: tips on finding and removing viruses, spyware, and other malware.
  • marloweChristopher, 1564–93, English dramatist and poet.
  • maxwellElsa, 1883–1963, U.S. professional hostess and author.
  • new lad — a cultural stereotype, which is basically a throwback to a supposedly more masculine or macho image of masculinity in reaction against the supposedly feminized 'New Man' of the 1990s
  • ownable — able to be owned
  • peafowl — any of several gallinaceous birds of the genera Pavo, of India, Sri Lanka, southeastern Asia, and the East Indies, and Afropavo, of Africa.
  • pinwale — (of a fabric, especially corduroy) having very thin wales.
  • pre-law — of, relating to, or engaged in studies in preparation for the formal study of law.
  • renewal — the act of renewing.
  • rowable — able to be rowed
  • salween — a river in SE Asia, flowing S from SW China through E Burma (Myanmar) to the Bay of Bengal. 1750 miles (2815 km) long.
  • seafowl — seabird.
  • sealwax — a sealing wax made from a preparation of shellac and turpentine that is soft and fluid when heated, but which hardens upon cooling
  • seawall — groyne: wave barrier
  • sewable — capable of being fastened or enclosed by stitches
  • sexwale — Tokyo. full name Mosima Gabriel Sexwale. born 1953; South African political activist and businessman
  • shawlie — a working-class woman, esp one who wears a shawl
  • swaddle — to bind (an infant, especially a newborn infant) with long, narrow strips of cloth to prevent free movement; wrap tightly with clothes.
  • swallet — an underground stream.
  • swazzle — a small metal instrument held in the mouth of a Punch and Judy puppeteer, used to produce the characteristic shrill voice of Mr Punch
  • teabowl — a small bowl used for serving tea
  • thalweg — a line, as drawn on a map, connecting the lowest points of a valley.
  • the law — the legal system
  • trawler — a person who trawls.
  • twaddle — trivial, feeble, silly, or tedious talk or writing.
  • twangle — to make a twanging sound, esp on a musical instrument
  • wadable — that can be waded: a wadable stream.
  • waddled — to walk with short steps, swaying or rocking from side to side, as a duck.
  • waddler — One who waddles.
  • waddles — Plural form of waddle.
  • waffled — to talk foolishly or without purpose; idle away time talking.
  • waffler — to speak or write equivocally: to waffle on an important issue.
  • waffles — Plural form of waffle.
  • waggled — Simple past tense and past participle of waggle.
  • waggler — a float only the bottom of which is attached to the line
  • waggles — Plural form of waggle.
  • wakeful — unable to sleep; not sleeping; indisposed to sleep: Excitement made the children wakeful.
  • walkers — Plural form of walker.
  • walketh — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of walk.
  • walkies — the act of taking a dog for a walk
  • walkure — See The Ring of the Nibelung.
  • wallace — Alfred Russel [ruhs-uh l] /ˈrʌs əl/ (Show IPA), 1823–1913, English naturalist, explorer, and author.
  • wallets — Plural form of wallet.
  • walleye — Also called walleyed pike, jack salmon. a large game fish, Stizostedion vitreum, inhabiting the lakes and rivers of northeastern North America; pikeperch.
  • wallies — Plural form of wally.
  • walpole — Horace, 4th Earl of Orford [awr-ferd] /ˈɔr fərd/ (Show IPA), (Horatio Walpole) 1717–97, English novelist and essayist (son of Sir Robert Walpole).
  • walters — Bruno [broo-noh] /ˈbru noʊ/ (Show IPA), (Bruno Schlesinger) 1876–1962, German opera and symphony conductor, in U.S. after 1939.
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