Updates
Your unread post, follow, and push notifications will appear here.
WERE, pron. er, which when prolonged, becomes ware. This is used as the imperfec...
WEPT, pret. and pp. of weep. When he had come near, he beheld the city and wept ...
WENT, pret. of the obsolete verb wend. We now arrange went in grammar as the pre...
WENNISH, WENNY, a. [from wen.] Having the nature of a wen.
WENNISH, WENNY, a. [from wen.] Having the nature of a wen.
WENNEL, n. A weanel. [See Weanel .]
WEND, v.i. 1. To go; to pass to or from. [Obsolete, except in poetry; but its pr...
WENCHING, ppr. Frequenting women of ill fame.
WENCHER, n. A lewd man.
WENCH, n. 1. A young woman. [Little used.] 2. A young woman of ill fame. 3. In A...
WEN, n. An encysted swelling or tumor; also, a fleshy excrescence growing on ani...
WEM, n. A spot; a scar. WEM , v.t to corrupt.
WELTERING, ppr. Rolling; wallowing; as in mire, blood, or other filthy matter.
WELTER, v.t. [G., L.] To roll, as the body of an animal; but usually, to roll or...
WELT, n. [See Wall .] A border; a kind of hem or edging, as on a garment or piec...
WELSH, a. [G., foreign, strange, Celtic.] Pertaining to the Welsh nation. WELSH ...