6-letter words containing w, e, l
- flawed — characterized by flaws; having imperfections: a flawed gem; a seriously flawed piece of work.
- flewed — (of hounds) having flews
- flowed — to move along in a stream: The river flowed slowly to the sea.
- flower — the blossom of a plant.
- flowre — Obsolete spelling of flower.
- fowled — the domestic or barnyard hen or rooster; chicken. Compare domestic fowl.
- fowler — Henry H(amill) [ham-uh l] /ˈhæm əl/ (Show IPA), 1908–2000, U.S. lawyer and government official: secretary of the Treasury 1965–68.
- fowles — John (Martin). 1926–2005, British novelist. His books include The Collector (1963), The Magus (1966), The French Lieutenant's Woman (1969), and The Tree (1991)
- glowed — a light emitted by or as if by a substance heated to luminosity; incandescence.
- glower — to look or stare with sullen dislike, discontent, or anger.
- gweilo — (ethnic slur) A Caucasian person, in China (generally a man); a ‘foreign devil’.
- howled — to utter a loud, prolonged, mournful cry, as that of a dog or wolf.
- howler — a person, animal, or thing that howls.
- howlet — an owl or owlet.
- inwale — (in an open boat) a horizontal timber binding together the frames along the top strake.
- jewels — a female given name.
- jowled — a jaw, especially the lower jaw.
- jowler — A dog with large jowls, such as the beagle.
- knawel — any of several plants belonging to the genus Scleranthus, of the pink family, native to Eurasia, especially S. annuus, a common, low-growing weed that forms dense mats.
- l wave — an earthquake wave that travels around the earth's surface and is usually the third conspicuous wave to reach a seismograph.
- lawers — Plural form of lawer.
- lawmen — Plural form of lawman.
- lawned — Provided with a lawn.
- lawyer — a person whose profession is to represent clients in a court of law or to advise or act for clients in other legal matters.
- leasow — to graze or pasture
- lebowa — a former Bantu homeland in NE South Africa, consisting of three separate territories with several smaller exclaves: abolished in 1993
- lechwe — an African antelope, Kobus leche, related to the waterbuck, inhabiting wet, grassy plains: a threatened species.
- leeway — extra time, space, materials, or the like, within which to operate; margin: With ten minutes' leeway we can catch the train.
- lewdly — inclined to, characterized by, or inciting to lust or lechery; lascivious.
- lowell — Abbott Lawrence [ab-uh t] /ˈæb ət/ (Show IPA), 1856–1943, political scientist and educator: president of Harvard University 1909–33.
- lowers — to cause to descend; let or put down: to lower a flag.
- lowery — dark and gloomy; threatening: a lowery sky.
- lowest — situated, placed, or occurring not far above the ground, floor, or base: a low shelf.
- lowkey — Alternative form of low key.
- mellow — soft, sweet, and full-flavored from ripeness, as fruit.
- mewled — to cry, as a baby, young child, or the like; whimper.
- mildew — Plant Pathology. a disease of plants, characterized by a cottony, usually whitish coating on the surface of affected parts, caused by any of various fungi.
- newels — Plural form of newel.
- nowell — Obsolete spelling of noel.
- nowels — Plural form of nowel.
- orwell — George (Eric Arthur Blair) 1903–50, English novelist and essayist.
- owelsh — Old Welsh
- owelty — equality, esp in financial transactions
- owlery — a place that owls inhabit
- plowed — an agricultural implement used for cutting, lifting, turning over, and partly pulverizing soil.
- powell — Adam Clayton, Jr. 1908–72, U.S. clergyman, politician, and civil-rights leader: congressman 1945–67, 1969–71.
- prawle — a brawl
- reflow — to flow again
- reglow — the act of glowing again
- replow — an agricultural implement used for cutting, lifting, turning over, and partly pulverizing soil.