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7-letter words containing w, h, e

  • wisbech — a town in E England, in N Cambridgeshire: market-gardening. Pop: 26 536 (2001)
  • wishers — to want; desire; long for (usually followed by an infinitive or a clause): I wish to travel. I wish that it were morning.
  • wishest — Archaic second-person singular form of wish.
  • wisheth — Archaic third-person singular form of wish.
  • witched — Simple past tense and past participle of witch.
  • witchen — another name for the rowan tree or European mountain ash
  • witcher — a person, now especially a woman, who professes or is supposed to practice magic or sorcery; a sorceress. Compare warlock.
  • witches — Plural form of witch.
  • withersGeorge, 1588–1667, English poet and pamphleteer.
  • withies — Plural form of withy.
  • worthed — to happen or betide: woe worth the day.
  • worthen — (ambitransitive) To give worth to; value; make or become worth or worthy; appraise.
  • wotcher — (chiefly, British) A friendly greeting.
  • wreathe — to encircle or adorn with or as with a wreath.
  • wreaths — Plural form of wreath.
  • wreathy — having the shape of a wreath: wreathy clouds.
  • wretche — Obsolete spelling of wretch.
  • wrexham — a town in N Wales, in Wrexham county borough: seat of the Roman Catholic bishopric of Wales (except the former Glamorganshire); formerly noted for coal-mining. Pop: 42 576 (2001)
  • writeth — Archaic third-person singular form of write.
  • writhed — to twist the body about, or squirm, as in pain, violent effort, etc.
  • writhen — twisted.
  • writher — to twist the body about, or squirm, as in pain, violent effort, etc.
  • writhes — to twist the body about, or squirm, as in pain, violent effort, etc.
  • wuhsien — Wade-Giles. Wuxian.
  • wykeham — William of. 1324–1404, English prelate and statesman, who founded New College, Oxford, and Winchester College: chancellor of England (1367–71; 1389–91); bishop of Winchester (1367–1404)
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