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6-letter words starting with w

  • wastel — (obsolete) A kind of fine white bread or cake.
  • waster — a person or thing that wastes time, money, etc.
  • wastes — Plural form of waste.
  • wastry — (Scotland, northern England) Extravagance, wastefulness.
  • watbol — WATerloo COBOL. A COBOL for IBM MVS.
  • waters — a transparent, odorless, tasteless liquid, a compound of hydrogen and oxygen, H 2 O, freezing at 32°F or 0°C and boiling at 212°F or 100°C, that in a more or less impure state constitutes rain, oceans, lakes, rivers, etc.: it contains 11.188 percent hydrogen and 88.812 percent oxygen, by weight.
  • watery — pertaining to or connected with water: watery Neptune.
  • watfiv — WATerloo Fortran IV. U Waterloo, Canada. Student-friendly variant of Fortran IV.
  • watfor — WATerloo FORtran. U Waterloo, Canada. Student-friendly variant of Fortran. "WATFOR - The University of Waterloo Fortran IV Compiler", P.W. Shantz et al, CACM 10(1):41-44 (Jan 1967).
  • watsonJames Dewey, born 1928, U.S. biologist: Nobel Prize in medicine 1962.
  • wattap — a thread made by North American Indians from the divided roots of certain conifers and used in weaving and sewing.
  • watter — a light bulb, radio station, etc., of specified wattage (usually used in combination): This lamp takes a 60-watter.
  • wattle — Often, wattles. a number of rods or stakes interwoven with twigs or tree branches for making fences, walls, etc.
  • watusi — Tutsi.
  • waucht — (Scotland) A large draught of any liquid.
  • waught — Alternative form of waucht.
  • wauker — a person who wauks cloth
  • wauled — Simple past tense and past participle of waul.
  • wausau — a city in central Wisconsin.
  • wavellArchibald Percival, 1st Earl, 1883–1950, British field marshal and author: viceroy of India 1943–47.
  • wavers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of waver.
  • wavery — Tending to waver; uncertain or hesitant.
  • wavier — curving alternately in opposite directions; undulating: a wavy course; wavy hair.
  • wavies — wavey.
  • wavily — Crookedly, twistingly, in a curved and winding manner.
  • waving — a disturbance on the surface of a liquid body, as the sea or a lake, in the form of a moving ridge or swell.
  • waxeth — (obsolete) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of wax.
  • waxier — Comparative form of waxy.
  • waxily — In a waxy way.
  • waxing — Also called beeswax. a solid, yellowish, nonglycerine substance allied to fats and oils, secreted by bees, plastic when warm and melting at about 145°F, variously employed in making candles, models, casts, ointments, etc., and used by bees in constructing their honeycomb.
  • waylay — to intercept or attack from ambush, as in order to rob, seize, or slay.
  • wazzup — Alternative spelling of wassup.
  • wałęsa — Lech (lɛç). born 1943, Polish statesman: president of Poland (1990–95); leader of the independent trade union Solidarity 1980–90; Nobel peace prize 1983
  • weaken — to make weak or weaker.
  • weaker — not strong; liable to yield, break, or collapse under pressure or strain; fragile; frail: a weak fortress; a weak spot in armor.
  • weakly — weak or feeble in constitution; not robust; sickly.
  • weakon — a subatomic particle
  • wealth — a great quantity or store of money, valuable possessions, property, or other riches: the wealth of a city.
  • weaned — Simple past tense and past participle of wean.
  • weanel — a recently weaned child or animal
  • weaner — a recently weaned animal.
  • weapon — any instrument or device for use in attack or defense in combat, fighting, or war, as a sword, rifle, or cannon.
  • weared — Simple past tense and past participle of wear.
  • wearer — 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.
  • weasal — Misspelling of weasel.
  • weasel — any small carnivore of the genus Mustela, of the family Mustelidae, having a long, slender body and feeding chiefly on small rodents.
  • weaved — Simple past tense and past participle of weave (
  • weaverJames Baird, 1833–1912, U.S. politician: congressman 1879–81, 1885–89.
  • weaves — Plural form of weave.
  • webapp — a software program that provides interactive functionality and is accessed through a web browser and URL.
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