Matching Words
4951 ResultsBelow are the words that matched your query.
Walloping
- adjective - (used informally) very large; "a thumping loss"
- a sound defeat
Wallopped
- verb - defeat soundly and utterly; "We'll wallop them!"
- hit hard; "The teacher whacked the boy"
Wallowing
- verb - be ecstatic with joy
- delight greatly in; "wallow in your success!"
- devote oneself entirely to something; indulge in to an immoderate degree, usually with pleasure; "Wallow in luxury"; "wallow in your sorrows"
- rise up as if in waves; "smoke billowed up into the sky"
- roll around, "pigs were wallowing in the mud"
Wallpaper
- noun - a decorative paper for the walls of rooms
- cover with wallpaper
Walpurgis
- unknown - As in Walpurgis Night - the Christian feast day of Saint Walpurga
Wampanoag
- noun - a member of the Algonquian people of Rhode Island and Massachusetts who greeted the Pilgrims
Wanamaker
- noun - United States businessman whose business grew into one of the first department stores (1838-1922)
Wanderers
- noun - a computer program that prowls the internet looking for publicly accessible resources that can be added to a database; the database can then be searched with a search engine
- Nomad
- roamer
- someone who leads a wandering unsettled life
Wandering
- verb - migratory; "a restless mobile society"; "the nomadic habits of the Bedouins"; "believed the profession of a peregrine typist would have a happy future"; "wandering tribes"
- be sexually unfaithful to one's partner in marriage; "She cheats on her husband"; "Might her husband be wandering?"
- go via an indirect route or at no set pace; "After dinner, we wandered into town"
- having no fixed course; "an erratic comet"; "his life followed a wandering course"; "a planetary vagabond"
- lose clarity or turn aside especially from the main subject of attention or course of argument in writing, thinking, or speaking; "She always digresses when telling a story"; "her mind wanders"; "Don't digress when you give a lecture"
- move about aimlessly or without any destination, often in search of food or employment; "The gypsies roamed the woods"; "roving vagabonds"; "the wandering Jew"; "The cattle roam across the prairie"; "the laborers drift from one town to t