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English 5 letter words - Containing letters wlu - page 1

Next letter probability

o : 35.71%

f : 35.71%

a : 28.57%

b : 14.29%

i : 14.29%

g : 14.29%

r : 7.14%

e : 7.14%

d : 7.14%

y : 7.14%

n : 7.14%

s : 7.14%

h : 7.14%

k : 7.14%

Possible word length

5

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Total results: 14

Flash Deals (EN)

awful

awful

adj

  1. (dated) Causing fear or horror; appalling, terrible.
  2. (now rare) Inspiring awe; filling with profound reverence or respect; profoundly impressive.
  3. (now rare) Struck or filled with awe or reverence.
  4. (obsolete) Terror-stricken.
  5. Exceedingly great; usually applied intensively.
  6. Very bad.

adv

  1. (colloquial) Awfully; dreadfully; terribly.
  2. (colloquial, US, Canada) Very, extremely.

bulow

fulwa

iflwu

ilgwu

lubow

unlaw

unlaw

noun

  1. (obsolete) A crime, an illegal action.
  2. (obsolete) A fine exacted from a transgressor of the law.
  3. Absence of law; lawlessness.

verb

  1. (transitive) To deprive of the authority or character of law.
  2. (transitive) To put beyond the protection of the law; to outlaw.
  3. (transitive, obsolete, Scotland, law) To fine.

wauls

wauls

verb

  1. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of waul

whulk

woful

woful

adj

  1. Obsolete spelling of woeful

wogul

would

would

noun

  1. Something that would happen, or would be the case, under different circumstances; a potentiality.

verb

  1. (archaic) Used with ellipsis of the infinitive verb, or postponement to a relative clause, in various senses.
  2. (archaic) Wanted to.
  3. (chiefly archaic) Might wish (+ verb in past subjunctive); often used in the first person (with or without that) in the sense of "if only".
  4. (chiefly archaic, transitive or control verb) Might desire; wish (something).
  5. (obsolete) Wished, desired (something).
  6. Could naturally have been expected to (given the tendencies of someone's character etc.).
  7. Suggesting conditionality or potentiality in order to express a sense of politeness, tentativeness, indirectness, hesitancy, uncertainty, etc.
  8. Used as the auxiliary of the simple conditional modality, indicating a state or action that is conditional on another.
  9. Used interrogatively to express a polite request; are (you) willing to …?
  10. Used to express the speaker's belief or assumption.
  11. Used to express what the speaker would do in another person's situation, as a means of giving a suggestion or recommendation.
  12. Used to form the "anterior future", or "future in the past", indicating a futurity relative to a past time.
  13. Used to; was or were habitually accustomed to; indicating an action in the past that happened repeatedly or commonly.
  14. Was or were determined to; indicating someone's insistence upon doing something.
  15. Without explicit condition, or with loose or vague implied condition, indicating a hypothetical or imagined state or action.

wulfe

wurly

wurly

adj

  1. (Northern England (Yorkshire), Scotland) Of an object: derisorily small, tiny; of a person: puny, stunted.
  2. (Scotland) gnarled, knotted; wizened, wrinkled.

noun

  1. (chiefly South Australia) Alternative spelling of wurley.