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7-letter words containing w, y

  • two-way — providing for or allowing movement in opposite directions, or both to and from a place: two-way traffic.
  • twyfold — twofold; double
  • tynwald — the legislature of the Isle of Man, consisting of the lieutenant governor, the council, and the House of Keys.
  • unshowy — not showy
  • unwayed — having no routes, ways, or paths
  • unweary — physically or mentally exhausted by hard work, exertion, strain, etc.; fatigued; tired: weary eyes; a weary brain.
  • unwitty — not clever or intelligent; silly; nonsensical.
  • vowelly — marked by vowels
  • wackily — In a way or to an extent that is wacky.
  • waggery — the action, spirit, or language of a wag; roguish or droll humor: the waggery of Shakespeare's clowns.
  • walkway — any passage for walking, especially one connecting the various areas of a ship, factory, park, etc.
  • wallaby — any of various small and medium-sized kangaroos of the genera Macropus, Thylogale, Petrogale, etc., some of which are no larger than rabbits: several species are endangered.
  • walleye — Also called walleyed pike, jack salmon. a large game fish, Stizostedion vitreum, inhabiting the lakes and rivers of northeastern North America; pikeperch.
  • wankery — (British, slang, vulgar) Unnecessary or pretentious noodling (messing around).
  • war cry — a cry, word, phrase, etc., shouted in charging or in rallying to attack; battle cry.
  • wary of — careful of
  • washday — the day set apart in a household for washing clothes: Monday is always washday at our house.
  • washery — a plant at a mine where water or other liquid is used to remove dirt from a mineral, esp coal
  • way car — caboose.
  • way-out — advanced in style or technique: way-out jazz.
  • waybill — a list of goods sent by a common carrier, as a railroad, with shipping directions.
  • wayfare — (archaic) Travel, journeying.
  • waygone — travel-weary
  • waylaid — simple past tense and past participle of waylay.
  • wayland — a city in NE Massachusetts.
  • waylays — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of waylay.
  • wayless — lacking a way, road, or path; trackless: wayless jungle.
  • waymark — A sign or symbol marked in a prominent position in an off-road location to show the track of a footpath or route; fingerpost; guidepost; milestone.
  • wayment — grief
  • waypost — A sign or other marker that indicates the way along a road or trail.
  • wayside — the side of the way; land immediately adjacent to a road, highway, path, etc.; roadside.
  • wayward — turned or turning away from what is right or proper; willful; disobedient: a wayward son; wayward behavior.
  • wayworn — worn or wearied by travel: She was wayworn after the long trip.
  • wealthy — having great wealth; rich; affluent: a wealthy person; a wealthy nation.
  • wearily — physically or mentally exhausted by hard work, exertion, strain, etc.; fatigued; tired: weary eyes; a weary brain.
  • weasely — Devious; misleading.
  • weedery — a weed-ridden area; a collection of weeds
  • weekday — any day of the week except Sunday or, often, Saturday and Sunday.
  • weekleyErnest, 1865–1954, English etymologist and lexicographer.
  • weepily — In a weepy manner.
  • weevily — infested with weevils.
  • weighty — having considerable weight; heavy; ponderous: a weighty bundle.
  • weirdly — involving or suggesting the supernatural; unearthly or uncanny: a weird sound; weird lights.
  • wembley — a former borough, now part of Brent, in SE England, near London.
  • wen-yen — the formal, literary variety of written Chinese, as used in classical literature.
  • wet fly — an artificial fly designed for use underwater.
  • weygand — Maxime [mak-seem] /makˈsim/ (Show IPA), 1867–1965, French general.
  • whalery — the whaling industry
  • whereby — By which.
  • wheyish — rather like whey: a mottled, wheyish complexion.
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