(obsolete) A call for help, or of distress, alarm etc.
noun
(military) An obstacle formed by turning an ordinary harrow upside down, the frame being buried.
A device consisting of a heavy framework having several disks or teeth in a row, which is dragged across ploughed land to smooth or break up the soil, to remove weeds or cover seeds; a harrow plow.
verb
(transitive) To break or tear, as if with a harrow; to wound; to lacerate; to torment or distress; to vex.
(transitive) To drag a harrow over; to break up with a harrow.
(transitive) To traumatize or disturb; to frighten or torment.
harwin
hawger
hawker
hawker
noun
A peddler, a huckster, a person who sells easily transportable goods.
Any dragonfly of the family Aeshnidae; a darner.
Someone who breeds and trains hawks and other falcons; a falconer.
hawser
hawser
noun
(nautical) A cable or heavy rope used to tow or moor a ship.
hewart
howard
howard
Proper noun
name, transferred back from the surname. Short form: Howie.
A small city in Kansas, USA
A small city in South Dakota, USA
howrah
howrah
Proper noun
A large city in India, in the state of West Bengal.
kharwa
khowar
khowar
Proper noun
An the spoken by the
mowrah
rahway
rawish
rawish
adj
Somewhat raw.
rechaw
rethaw
rethaw
verb
(transitive, intransitive) To thaw again after freezing or having been frozen.
rewash
rewash
noun
The act of washing something again
verb
To wash again
swarth
swarth
adj
(archaic) swarthy
noun
Alternative form of sward
An apparition of a person about to die; a wraith.
thawer
thawer
noun
A device for thawing something.
thrawn
thraws
thwart
thwart
adj
(figuratively, dated) Of people: having a tendency to oppose; obstinate, perverse, stubborn.
(figuratively, dated) Of situations or things: adverse, unfavourable, unlucky.
Placed or situated across something else; cross, oblique, transverse.
adv
(obsolete) Across the direction of travel or length of; athwart, crosswise, obliquely, transversely.
noun
(nautical) A brace, perpendicular to the keel, that helps maintain the beam (“breadth”) of a marine vessel against external water pressure and that may serve to support the rail.
(nautical) A seat across a boat on which a rower may sit.
(rare) An act of thwarting; something which thwarts; a hindrance, an obstacle.
prep
(archaic or poetic) Across, athwart.
verb
(transitive) To cause to fail; to frustrate, to prevent.
(transitive, also figuratively, obsolete) To hinder or obstruct by placing (something) in the way of; to block, to impede, to oppose.
(transitive, intransitive, obsolete) To move (something) across or counter to; to cross.
(transitive, obsolete) To place (something) across (another thing); to position crosswise.
wairch
wairsh
warhol
warish
warish
adj
Alternative form of warrish (“warlike”).
verb
(obsolete, intransitive) To get better; to recover from an illness.
(obsolete, transitive) To cure or heal (an illness or a person).
warmth
warmth
noun
(art) The effect of using mostly red and yellow hues.
A moderate degree of heat; the sensation of being warm.
Fervor, intensity of emotion or expression.
Friendliness, kindness or affection.
warthe
washer
washer
noun
A face cloth.
A flat disk, placed beneath a nut or at some joint, to distribute pressure, alleviate friction or prevent leakage.
A person who washes (especially clothes) for a living; a washerman or washerwoman.
A person who washes his or her hands compulsively, as a symptom of obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Something that washes; especially an appliance such as a washing machine or dishwasher.
verb
(transitive) To fit (a mechanical device) with a washer.
wather
wather
noun
Pronunciation spelling of water.
whaler
whaler
noun
(Australia) Any shark of the family Carcharhinidae; a requiem shark.
(Australian slang, dated) A sundowner; one who cruises about.
(slang) A large, strong person.
(slang) Something of unusually great size, a whopper, a whacker.
A seagoing vessel used for hunting whales.
One who hunts whales; a person employed in the whaling industry.
One who whales (flogs or beats).
wharfe
wharfs
wharry
wharve
wharve
verb
(Scotland, Northern England) to turn, turn over (especially of mown grass).
whatre
wirrah
wirrah
noun
(Australia) A serranid fish of the genus Acanthistius
wraith
wraith
noun
A ghost or specter, especially a person's likeness seen just after their death.
wraths
wraths
noun
plural of wrath
wrathy
wrathy
adj
(chiefly US) Feeling wrath; very angry, furious.
wreath
wreath
noun
(heraldry) An appendage to the shield, placed above it, and supporting the crest; an orle, a torse. It generally represents a twist of two cords of silk, one tinctured like the principal metal, the other like the principal color in the coat of arms.
A defect in glass.
An ornamental circular band made, for example, of plaited flowers and leaves, and used as decoration; a garland or chaplet, especially one given to a victor.
Something twisted, intertwined, or curled.
verb
(transitive) To place an entwined circle of flowers upon or around something.
(transitive) To wrap around something in a circle.