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

  • waltzed — Simple past tense and past participle of waltz.
  • waltzer — a ballroom dance, in moderately fast triple meter, in which the dancers revolve in perpetual circles, taking one step to each beat.
  • waltzes — Plural form of waltz.
  • wameful — a bellyful
  • wangled — Simple past tense and past participle of wangle.
  • wangler — A person who wangles.
  • wangles — Plural form of wangle.
  • warbled — Past participle of warble.
  • warbler — any of several small, chiefly Old World songbirds of the subfamily Sylviidae. Compare blackcap (def 1), reed warbler.
  • warbles — Plural form of warble.
  • wareful — (obsolete) wary; watchful; cautious.
  • warless — unmarked by war: The international conflict was followed by a warless decade.
  • warlike — fit, qualified, or ready for war; martial: a warlike fleet; warlike tribes.
  • warsler — a wrestler
  • wastrel — a wasteful person; spendthrift.
  • wattled — Having a wattle.
  • wattles — Plural form of wattle.
  • wavelet — a small wave; ripple.
  • wavicle — an entity with both wave and particle properties
  • waxable — able to be waxed
  • waxlike — Resembling wax.
  • wayless — lacking a way, road, or path; trackless: wayless jungle.
  • wealing — Present participle of weal.
  • wealths — a great quantity or store of money, valuable possessions, property, or other riches: the wealth of a city.
  • wealthy — having great wealth; rich; affluent: a wealthy person; a wealthy nation.
  • wearily — physically or mentally exhausted by hard work, exertion, strain, etc.; fatigued; tired: weary eyes; a weary brain.
  • weasels — Plural form of weasel.
  • weasely — Devious; misleading.
  • web pal — a person one meets and corresponds with over the internet
  • webmail — E-mail that is available for use online and stored in the Internet server mailbox, and that is not downloaded to an e-mail program or used offline.
  • weigela — any of various shrubby, eastern Asian plants belonging to the genus Weigela, of the honeysuckle family, having funnel-shaped white, pink, or crimson flowers.
  • welfare — the good fortune, health, happiness, prosperity, etc., of a person, group, or organization; well-being: to look after a child's welfare; the physical or moral welfare of society.
  • welland — a city in SE Ontario, in S Canada, on the Welland Ship Canal.
  • weslaco — a city in S Texas.
  • wetland — Often, wetlands. land that has a wet and spongy soil, as a marsh, swamp, or bog.
  • whalers — Plural form of whaler.
  • whalery — the whaling industry
  • whample — a stroke; blow
  • wieland — Christoph Martin [kris-tawf mahr-teen] /ˈkrɪs tɔf ˈmɑr tin/ (Show IPA), 1733–1813, German poet, novelist, and critic.
  • wildean — of, pertaining to, characteristic of, or resembling the literary style of Oscar Wilde.
  • wirable — able to be wired
  • wrangel — a Russian island in the Arctic Ocean, off the NE coast of Siberia in the NE Russian Federation in Asia: meteorological station. About 2000 sq. mi. (5180 sq. km).
  • wrangle — to argue or dispute, especially in a noisy or angry manner.
  • wrassle — Eye dialect of wrestle, representing African American Vernacular English.
  • wrastle — wrestle
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