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Words containing w, i, l, o

4 letter words containing w, i, l, o

  • wiol — Washington Interscholastic Orienteering League

5 letter words containing w, i, l, o

  • loewi — Otto [ot-oh;; German awt-oh] /ˈɒt oʊ;; German ˈɔt oʊ/ (Show IPA), 1873–1961, German pharmacologist in the U.S.: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1936.
  • wilco — Expressing compliance or agreement, especially acceptance of instructions received by radio.
  • wilno — Polish name of Vilnius.

6 letter words containing w, i, l, o

  • billow — When something made of cloth billows, it swells out and moves slowly in the wind.
  • blowie — a blowfly
  • gweilo — (ethnic slur) A Caucasian person, in China (generally a man); a ‘foreign devil’.
  • inflow — something that flows in; influx.
  • lowing — to burn; blaze.

7 letter words containing w, i, l, o

  • airflow — The airflow around an object or vehicle is the way that the air flows around it.
  • airglow — the faint light from the upper atmosphere in the night sky, esp in low latitudes
  • billowy — full of or forming billows
  • blow-in — (of a piece of advertising) inserted in but not attached to a magazine or newspaper: blow-in cards.
  • blowing — moving of air

8 letter words containing w, i, l, o

  • airflows — Plural form of airflow.
  • allowing — to give permission to or for; permit: to allow a student to be absent; No swimming allowed.
  • billowed — a great wave or surge of the sea.
  • blowfish — puffer (sense 2)
  • blowiron — blowpipe (def 2).

9 letter words containing w, i, l, o

  • agilawood — agalloch.
  • antiworld — a hypothetical or supposed world or universe composed of antimatter
  • archilowe — a treat, such as a drink, given in return for something
  • arrowlike — resembling an arrow
  • bellowing — to emit a hollow, loud, animal cry, as a bull or cow.

10 letter words containing w, i, l, o

  • axial-flow — having a fluid flow parallel to an axis of rotation, as in a turbine.
  • batfowling — A method of catching birds at night, by holding a torch or other light, and beating the bush or perch where they roost so that the birds fly towards the light.
  • blind-worm — a limbless European lizard, Anguis fragilis, related to the glass lizards.
  • blow-dried — dried using hairdryer
  • boswellize — to write an account of in the detailed manner of Boswell.

11 letter words containing w, i, l, o

  • allowancing — Present participle of allowance.
  • backflowing — Flowing backwards.
  • belowstairs — (formerly) at or in the basement of a large house, considered as the place where the servants live and work
  • brownsville — city & port in S Tex., on the Rio Grande: pop. 140,000
  • cauliflower — Cauliflower is a large round vegetable that has a hard white centre surrounded by green leaves.

12 letter words containing w, i, l, o

  • allowability — The state of being allowable; legitimacy; permissibleness.
  • blow-molding — the sound of any vapor or gas issuing from a vent under pressure.
  • bowdlerizing — to expurgate (a written work) by removing or modifying passages considered vulgar or objectionable.
  • cauliflowers — Plural form of cauliflower.
  • childcrowing — a disease which causes spasms of the vocal cords

13 letter words containing w, i, l, o

  • acknowledging — Present participle of acknowledg.
  • allhallowtide — the season of All Saints' Day (Allhallows)
  • anticlockwise — If something is moving anticlockwise, it is moving in the opposite direction to the direction in which the hands of a clock move.
  • bowling-green — a game played with wooden balls on a level, closely mowed green having a slight bias, the object being to roll one's ball as near as possible to a smaller white ball at the other end of the green. Also called bowls, bowling on the green. Compare bowl2 (def 2), bowling green, jack1 (def 7), rink (def 5).
  • caulifloweret — an individual floret from a cauliflower

14 letter words containing w, i, l, o

  • below-the-line — denoting the entries printed below the horizontal line on a company's profit-and-loss account that show how any profit is to be distributed
  • brother-in-law — Someone's brother-in-law is the brother of their husband or wife, or the man who is married to their sister.
  • clock-watching — the act of checking the time in anticipation of a break or the end of the working day
  • crawfordsville — a city in W central Indiana.
  • daffadowndilly — a daffodil

15 letter words containing w, i, l, o

  • cauliflowerette — a single floret from the head of a cauliflower.
  • coldwater-river — a river in NW Mississippi, flowing S to the Tallahatchie River. 220 miles (354 km) long.
  • contraclockwise — Counterclockwise.
  • flamingo-flower — a central American plant, Anthurium scherzeranum, of the arum family, having a red, coiled spadix and a bright red, shiny, heart-shaped spathe, grown as an ornamental.
  • forward-looking — planning for or anticipating possible future events, conditions, etc.; progressive.

16 letter words containing w, i, l, o

  • backward-looking — If you describe someone or something as backward-looking, you disapprove of their attitudes, ideas, or actions because they are based on old-fashioned opinions or methods.
  • counterclockwise — If something is moving counterclockwise, it is moving in the opposite direction to the direction in which the hands of a clock move.
  • dyed-in-the-wool — through and through; complete: a dyed-in-the-wool reformer.
  • gasoline-powered — using gasoline as fuel
  • hole-in-the-wall — A hole-in-the-wall machine is a machine built into the wall of a bank or other building, which allows people to take out money from their bank account by using a special card.

17 letter words containing w, i, l, o

  • browserconfig.xml — (web)   A Microsoft configuration file used to customise the appearance and behaviour of website links pinned to the Windows start screen or desktop taskbar. browserconfig.xml allows the site owner to specify things like badges and tile images.
  • downwardly-mobile — See under vertical mobility (def 1).
  • well-accomplished — completed; done; effected: an accomplished fact.
  • well-proportioned — adjusted to proper proportion or relation.
  • white-nationalism — white supremacy.

18 letter words containing w, i, l, o

  • chuck-will's-widow — a large North American nightjar, Caprimulgus carolinensis, similar to the whippoorwill
  • farewell-to-spring — a slender, showy plant, Clarkia amoena, of the evening primrose family, native to western North America, having satiny, cup-shaped, lilac-crimson or reddish-pink flowers and roundish fruit.
  • schleswig-holstein — two contiguous duchies of Denmark that were a center of international tension in the 19th century: Prussia annexed Schleswig 1864 and Holstein 1866.

19 letter words containing w, i, l, o

20 letter words containing w, i, l, o

  • bowling-on-the-green — a game played with wooden balls on a level, closely mowed green having a slight bias, the object being to roll one's ball as near as possible to a smaller white ball at the other end of the green. Also called bowls, bowling on the green. Compare bowl2 (def 2), bowling green, jack1 (def 7), rink (def 5).
  • hail-fellow-well-met — friendly but insincere
  • model-view-presenter — (programming)   (MVP) A user interface architectural pattern where functions are separated between the model, view and presenter. The model defines the data to be displayed or otherwise acted upon in the user interface. The view displays data from the model and routes user commands (events) to the presenter to act upon that data. The presenter retrieves data from the model and displays it in the view. The implementation of MVP can vary as to how much presentation logic is handled by the presenter and the view. In a web application most presentation logic is usually in the view which runs in the web browser. MVP is one of the MV* variations of the MVC pattern.
  • what-you-may-call-it — an object or person whose name one does not know or cannot recall.

21 letter words containing w, i, l, o

  • model-view-controller — (programming)   (MVC) A way of partitioning the design of interactive software; a software architecture pattern. The "model" is the internal workings of the program (the data objects and algorithms), the "view" is how the user sees the state of the model and the "controller" is how the user changes the state or provides input. MVC was the original kind of what is now sometimes called an MV* pattern. Trygve Reenskaug introduced it into Smalltalk-76 while visiting Xerox PARC in the 1970s.
  • pellitory-of-the-wall — an urticaceous plant, P. diffusa, of the S and W European genus Parietaria, which grows in crevices and has long narrow leaves and small pink flowers

22 letter words containing w, i, l, o

  • the-leaning-tower-pisa — a round, marble campanile in Pisa, Italy, begun in 1174 and now 17 feet (5.2 meters) out of the perpendicular in its height of 179 feet (54 meters).
  • whitchurch-stouffville — a town in SW Ontario, in S Canada, N of Toronto.

30 letter words containing w, i, l, o

  • call-with-current-continuation — (programming)   (call/cc) A Lisp control function that implements the continuation passing style of programming. In continuation passing style (CPS), every function f takes an extra final argument k called the "continuation". The continuation is itself a function and represents the rest of the program. Instead of just returning a value in the normal way, f passes it as an argument to k and returns the result of that. call/cc takes a function f as its argument and calls f, passing it the current continuation k. It thus allows a CPS function to be called in a non-CPS (direct) context. For example, if the final result is to print the value returned by call/cc then anything passed to k will also be printed. E.g, in Scheme: (define (f k) (k 1) (k 2) 3) (display (call-with-current-continuation f)) Will display 1.

On this page, we collect all words with W, I, L, O. To make easier to find the right word we have divided all 3199 words to groups according to their length. So you should go to appropriate page if can’t find the word that contains W, I, L, O that you are searching. Also you can use this page in Scrabble.

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