5-letter words containing w, y
- wholy — Obsolete form of wholly.
- why's — for what? for what reason, cause, or purpose?: Why did you behave so badly?
- whyle — Obsolete spelling of while.
- whyte — Obsolete spelling of white.
- wicky — Sheep laurel.
- widdy — a band or rope, traditionally one made from intertwined willow twigs.
- wiery — Obsolete form of wiry.
- wifey — A condescending way of referring to a man’s wife.
- wifty — Eccentric, silly, scatterbrained.
- wiggy — crazy or eccentric.
- willy — willow (def 4).
- wimpy — of, relating to, or characteristic of a wimp.
- windy — accompanied or characterized by wind: a windy day.
- winey — of, like, or characteristic of wine.
- wingy — having wings.
- winky — Tending to wink; winking.
- winny — a male given name, form of Winston.
- wisby — German name of Visby.
- wisly — (rare, dialectal, or, obsolete) certainly; surely.
- wispy — being a wisp or in wisps; wisplike: a wispy plant.
- withy — a willow.
- witty — possessing wit in speech or writing; amusingly clever in perception and expression: a witty writer.
- wolfy — Wolfish; like a wolf.
- wolly — a pickled cucumber or olive
- womby — (obsolete) capacious.
- womyn — Nonstandard spelling of “ women ” adopted by some feminists in order to avoid the word ending -men.
- wonky — British Slang. shaky, groggy, or unsteady. unreliable; not trustworthy.
- woody — abounding with wood; wooded.
- woofy — having a close or dense texture
- wooly — consisting of wool: a woolly fleece.
- woosy — (dialectal) oozy; wet.
- woozy — stupidly confused; muddled: woozy from a blow on the head.
- wordy — characterized by or given to the use of many, or too many, words; verbose: She grew impatient at his wordy reply.
- wormy — containing a worm or worms; contaminated with worms.
- worry — to torment oneself with or suffer from disturbing thoughts; fret.
- wrily — In a wry manner.
- wryer — Comparative form of wry.
- wryly — produced by a distortion or lopsidedness of the facial features: a wry grin.
- wussy — a weakling; wimp.
- wvyrc — West Valley Youth Rugby Club
- wyatt — James, 1746–1813, English architect.
- wycct — Waikiki Yacht Club Canoe Team
- wyeth — Andrew Newell [noo-uh l,, nyoo-] /ˈnu əl,, ˈnyu-/ (Show IPA), 1917–2009, U.S. painter.
- wykes — Plural form of wyke.
- wyler — William, 1902–81, U.S. film director, born in Germany.
- wylie — Elinor (Elinor Morton Hoyt) 1885–1928, U.S. poet and novelist.
- wynds — (Scotland) Plural form of wynd.
- wynns — Plural form of wynn.
- wyted — a fine imposed by a king or lord on a subject who committed a serious crime. a fee demanded for granting a special privilege.
- wythe — George, 1729–1806, U.S. jurist and statesman.