A field or pasture; a piece of land covered or cultivated with grass, usually intended to be mown for hay.
Low land covered with coarse grass or rank herbage near rivers and in marshy places by the sea.
medway
medway
Proper noun
a major river of southern England, flowing through Sussex and Kent into the Thames Estuary.
the name of a unitary authority in North Kent, England, which includes the Medway Towns on both sides of the river.
meward
newham
newham
Proper noun
A London Borough in eastern Greater London, comprising East Ham and West Ham.
newman
pewamo
rewarm
rewarm
verb
To warm again; to bring back to a state of warmth.
seamew
seamew
noun
The common gull (Larus canus).
wadmel
waimea
wamble
wamble
noun
(dialect) A rumble of the stomach.
(dialect) An unsteady walk; a staggering or wobbling.
(obsolete) Nausea; seething; bubbling.
verb
(dialect) To feel nauseous, to churn (of stomach).
(dialect) To twist and turn; to wriggle; to roll over.
(dialect) To wobble, to totter, to waver; to walk with an unsteady gait.
wamefu
wamego
wamfle
wampee
wampee
noun
A tree, Clausena lansium, cultivated in China and the East Indies.
wample
warmed
warmed
adj
At a higher degree of compassion or friendship.
At a higher temperature.
verb
simple past tense and past participle of warm
warmen
warmen
noun
plural of warman
warmer
warmer
adj
comparative form of warm: more warm
noun
A piece of clothing for warmth, such as a bodywarmer or leg warmer.
An introductory activity, for example in a lesson, to stimulate interest in a topic.
Something that warms, such as a heater or a soup.
wastme
waumle
waymen
weiman
weimar
weimar
Proper noun
A city in Germany located in the Bundesland of Thuringia (German: Thüringen), north of the Thüringer Wald, east of Erfurt, and southwest of Halle and Leipzig.
The period in German history from 1919 to 1933, when the nation was under a constitution drafted in the city of Weimar.