A whip made from plaited leather, often with a knotted end, for use with livestock.
verb
(transitive) To beat with a bullwhip.
bushwife
gluhwein
gluhwein
noun
A type of mulled wine from German-speaking countries made from red wine with cinnamon and other herbs and spices.
hurlwind
hurlwind
noun
(obsolete) whirlwind
huswifes
huswifes
noun
plural of huswife
huswives
iwurthen
outweigh
outweigh
verb
(transitive) To exceed in importance or value.
(transitive) To exceed in weight or mass.
outwhirl
outwhirl
verb
(rare, transitive) To surpass in whirling or spinning.
pishquow
suchwise
suchwise
adv
(archaic) In such a way; in that manner.
thuswise
thuswise
adv
(dated) In this way.
unjewish
unjewish
adj
Alternative spelling of un-Jewish
unweight
unweight
verb
To remove a statistical weighting from.
To temporarily remove the body's weight from a ski when making a turn.
unwhited
unwhited
adj
Not whited; not made white.
unwished
unwished
adj
unwished-for
verb
simple past tense and past participle of unwish
unwishes
unwishes
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of unwish
whiskful
whiskful
noun
As much as a whisk will hold.
whitecup
whitecup
noun
The solanaceous plant Nierembergia rivularis.
whiteout
whiteout
noun
(computing) The simulated erasure of a file, etc. on a read-only volume.
(sports, slang) A sporting event where all in attendance are urged to wear white apparel.
A heavy snowstorm; a blizzard.
Any weather condition in which visibility and contrast are severely reduced by snow or sand causing the horizon and physical features of the terrain to disappear.
Correction fluid (from the brand name Wite-Out).
The silencing of voices and perspectives other than those of white men.
The suppression of a story by the media, analogously to deleting information with correction fluid.
whodunit
whodunit
noun
A novel or drama concerning a crime (usually a murder) in which a detective follows clues to determine the perpetrator.
whumping
whumping
verb
present participle of whump
witchuck
witchuck
noun
(UK, dialect, obsolete) The sand martin, or bank swallow.