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9-letter words containing w, h, i, t, e

  • tightwire — tightrope (def 1).
  • tin-white — white, as the color of tin; bluish-white.
  • twentieth — next after the nineteenth; being the ordinal number for 20.
  • twentyish — around or approximately twenty
  • wealthier — Comparative form of wealthy.
  • wealthily — In a wealthy way.
  • wear thin — to carry or have on the body or about the person as a covering, equipment, ornament, or the like: to wear a coat; to wear a saber; to wear a disguise.
  • weeknight — any night of the week, usually except Saturday and Sunday.
  • weigh out — If you weigh something out, you measure a certain weight of it in order to make sure that you have the correct amount.
  • weightier — Comparative form of weighty.
  • weightily — In a weighty manner; ponderously; forcibly.
  • weighting — the amount or quantity of heaviness or mass; amount a thing weighs.
  • weightism — bias or discrimination against people who are overweight.
  • weightist — bias or discrimination against people who are overweight.
  • weightman — a person whose work is to weigh goods or merchandise.
  • wethering — Present participle of wether.
  • wheatbird — A bird that feeds on wheat, especially the chaffinch.
  • whereinto — Into which.
  • wherewith — Rare. wherewithal.
  • whinstone — Chiefly British. any of the dark-colored, fine-grained rocks, especially igneous rocks, as dolerite and basalt.
  • whistlers — Plural form of whistler.
  • whit week — Whitsuntide.
  • whitbread — Fatima. born 1961, British javelin thrower: won gold at the World Championships (1987)
  • white ant — termite
  • white ash — any of various trees of the genus Fraxinus, of the olive family, especially F. excelsior, of Europe and Asia, or F. americana (white ash) of North America, having opposite, pinnate leaves and purplish flowers in small clusters.
  • white fir — a tall, narrow fir, Abies concolor, of western North America, yielding a soft wood used for lumber, pulp, boxes, etc.
  • white fox — Arctic fox.
  • white gum — any of various Australian eucalyptuses having a whitish bark.
  • white hat — a virtuous hero, especially in a cowboy movie; good guy.
  • white lie — a minor, polite, or harmless lie; fib.
  • white oak — a town in central Maryland, near Washington, D.C.
  • white out — of the color of pure snow, of the margins of this page, etc.; reflecting nearly all the rays of sunlight or a similar light.
  • white owl — snowy owl
  • white rat — an albino variety of the Norway rat, Rattus norvegicus, used in biological experiments.
  • white rot — a decay of wood caused by lignase-producing fungi, especially Phanerochaete chrysosporium.
  • white sea — an arm of the Arctic Ocean, in the NW Russian Federation in Europe. About 36,000 sq. mi. (93,240 sq. km).
  • white tie — men's formal dress
  • white wax — a yellowish-white, somewhat translucent, tasteless solid, prepared by bleaching beeswax, used chiefly in pharmacy.
  • white-ant — to undermine or subvert from within.
  • white-eye — any of numerous small, chiefly tropical Old World songbirds of the family Zosteropidae, most of which have a ring of white feathers around the eye: several species are endangered.
  • white-hot — extremely hot.
  • white-tie — requiring that guests wear formal attire, especially that men wear white bow ties with formal evening dress: a white-tie embassy reception.
  • whiteacre — an arbitrary name for a piece of land used for purposes of supposition in legal argument or the like (often distinguished from blackacre).
  • whitebait — a young sprat or herring.
  • whitebark — The North American pine Pinus albicaulis, found in mountainous and subalpine regions, often as krummholz.
  • whitebass — a freshwater fish, Morone chrysops, of the bass family Moronidae, native to North American lakes and rivers
  • whitebeam — a European tree, Sorbus aria, of the rose family, having leathery leaves, showy, white flowers, and mealy, orange-red or scarlet fruit.
  • whiteboys — a secret agrarian peasant organization, active in Ireland during the early 1760s, whose members wore white shirts for recognition on their night raids to destroy crops, barns, and other property in redressing grievances against landlords and protesting the paying of tithes.
  • whitecaps — Plural form of whitecap.
  • whitecoat — a baby seal, usually less than four weeks old and still having its initial white fur.
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