High School Vocabulary
353,744 words and 27,916 expressions at the high school level.
plural of w****r
plural of w**ker
plural of w*nker
plural of W-8BEN
plural of w-anchor
a fundamental particle, a gauge boson, that, together with the Z-boson, mediates the weak nuclear force; it has a charge of ± 1
plural of W-boson
A kind of inverted z-buffer, storing inverse depth values, which has some advantages for interpolation and precision scaling.
plural of w-buffer
the A-League Women (the top professional women's soccer league in Australia and New Zealand; equivalent to the A-League for men)
Shaped like the letter W.
An abnormal posture in which a person sits with their knees forward and feet splayed outward.
plural of w-word
Initialism of United States District Court for the Western District of North Carolina, as used in case citations.
United States District Court for the Western District of New York, as used in case citations.
Abbreviation of without loss of generality.
Elongated form of water.
One who dances in the waacking style.
plural of waacker
A style of disco dance involving rhythmic footwork and moving one's arms to the beat.
A municipality of Friesland, Netherlands.
A peak in the Hex River Mountains, Western Cape, South Africa, north-east of Cape Town.
An Australian Aboriginal language spoken by the Western Bundjalung living in northeast New South Wales.
A city and municipality of North Brabant, Netherlands.
A locality in the Shire of Loddon, north western Victoria, Australia
A lake in central Alberta, Canada.
A confederation of Native American nations/First Nations and their traditional territories that stretches from Newfoundland in the north, to mid-Maine in the south, and parts of Quebec in the west.
A city, the county seat of Wabasha County, Minnesota, United States.
An unincorporated community in Wabaunsee County, Kansas, United States.
plural of wabbit
simple past and past participle of wabble
Alternative form of wobbler
plural of wabbler
third-person singular simple present indicative of wabble
present participle and gerund of wabble
plural of wabbling
A Japanese aesthetic that derives from imperfection and transience.
Alternative form of wabi-sabi.
Alternative spelling of Abenaki.
A locality in the Rural City of Wangaratta, north eastern Victoria, Australia.
plural of waboom
Alternative form of hwabyeong.
Obsolete form of wakizashi (“Japanese short sword”).
A member of an indigenous people who lived in villages along the Waccamaw and Pee Dee rivers in North and South Carolina in the 18th century.
plural of Waccamaw
Alternative form of Chaga (“Bantu-speaking ethnic group”).
Alternative form of Chaga (“Bantu-speaking ethnic group”).
plural of wachna
plural of Wachob
A surname from Polish.
A Polish-Canadian surname.
A surname from Polish.
A surname from German.
plural of Wachtel
A surname.
plural of Wachter
Alternative form of Wachusett.
A mountain in Massachusetts.
Among the Oglala Sioux people, a culture-bound syndrome of withdrawn mute anger directed at another person.
plural of wackadoo
plural of Wacker
superlative form of wack: most wack
comparative form of wacky: more wacky
plural of wacky
superlative form of wacky: most wacky
In a way or to an extent that is wacky.
Alternative spelling of whackjob.
plural of wackjob
plural of wacko
A male given name.
plural of Wacoan
Dated form of Wakanda.
Alternative spelling of wad hook.
plural of wad-hook
Alternative spelling of wadeable.
Synonym of Antigua (as known by the native population)
A locality in the Central Coast council area, eastern New South Wales, Australia.
A vitreous nesosilicate of calcium, aluminium and magnesium
plural of Wadas
a special-purpose bullet designed for shooting paper targets, usually at close range and at subsonic velocities.
A locality in Central Highlands Council, central Tasmania, Australia.
A surname
A surname from Old English.
plural of Waddell
plural of wadder
A village and civil parish in Buckinghamshire, England, formerly in Aylesbury Vale district (OS grid ref SP7416).
simple past and past participle of waddy
plural of waddy
plural of wadding
simple past and past participle of waddle
One who waddles.
plural of waddler
plural of waddle
present participle and gerund of waddle
plural of waddling
present participle and gerund of waddy
An Australian tree, Pittosporum bicolor.
Able to be waded across.
A hexagonal-dipyramidal mineral containing oxygen, potassium, silicon, and zirconium.
A village and civil parish (served by Pilton, Stoke Doyle and Wadenhoe Parish Council) in North Northamptonshire district, Northamptonshire, England, previously in East Northamptonshire district (OS grid ref TL0183).
An unincorporated community in Leon County, Florida, United States.
A locality in the Kyogle council area, north eastern New South Wales, Australia.
A surname.
A surname.
plural of Wadford
A surname.
plural of Wadforth
Alternative spelling of wad hook.
plural of wadhook
A market town and civil parish in Wealden district, East Sussex, England (OS grid ref TQ6431).
A surname from Sindhi.
plural of Wadhwani
plural of Wadhwa
So as to wade.
plural of wading
A white person.
plural of wadjela
Rottnest Island: an island off the coast of Western Australia.
plural of wadjet
A surname.
plural of Wadleigh
plural of Wadley
Resembling or characteristic of wad (the mineral substance).
The recreational activity of walking or wading across mudflats at low tide.
plural of Wadlow
Alternative form of wadmal.
plural of wadmaal
plural of wadmal
plural of Wadman
Alternative form of wadmal
Alternative form of wadmal
Alternative form of wadmal
plural of wadmoll
A city in southern Poland, in the eastern part of Silesian Foothills.
plural of wadset
Alternative form of wadset.
simple past and past participle of wadset
A person who holds tenure by wadset.
plural of wadsett
A surname.
plural of Wadsley
A civil parish in Calderdale borough, West Yorkshire, England.
A surname.
plural of Wadworth
A surname.
plural of Waechter
A Japanese ethnic enclave in Joseon.
plural of waegwan
Synonym of Nheengatu.
The policies and attitudes of the Wafd Party, a nationalist liberal political party in Egypt.
A member or supporter of the Wafd Party, a nationalist liberal political party in Egypt.
plural of Wafdist
simple past and past participle of wafer
A maker of wafers.
plural of waferer
present participle and gerund of wafer
Resembling or characteristic of a wafer.
Without a wafer.
Having a shape or texture similar to a wafer.
The combat branch of the Schutzstaffel.
present participle and gerund of waff
Having a waffle-like pattern of intersecting creases.
One who waffles, or changes sides or positions frequently.
plural of waffler
plural of waffle
Characterized by the presence of waffle (vague speech).
comparative form of waffly /waffley: more waffly /waffley
superlative form of waffly /waffley: most waffly /waffley
A repetitive speech or response to a question.
plural of waffling
A surname.
plural of Wafford
A frozen waffle-flavored treat.
Conveyance, transportation on a buoyant medium, such as air or water. The act of being wafted.
plural of waftage
plural of wafter
present participle and gerund of waft
So as to waft.
plural of wafting
Something that is wafted, such as a smell or sound.
plural of wafture
Alternative form of wagpastie.
Alternative form of waggadash.
Alternative form of Ouagadougou.
A surname.
plural of Wagaman
The Ganda people of Uganda.
plural of mganga
Traditional Japanese confectionery in various forms, often served with tea.
A surname.
The fifth month of the traditional Burmese calendar.
Alternative form of wagecuck.
Capable of being waged or fought.
plural of wagecuck
The practice of hiring workers for wages.
Without a wage.
One who is hired for wages, especially one motivated solely by money; a hireling.
plural of wageling
An Australian Aboriginal language spoken in the Northern Territory in Australia
plural of wageman
A South African proteaceous tree (Protea nitida).
A surname.
plural of Wagener
Suitable for wagering; capable of being gambled.
simple past and past participle of wager
A person who wagers or bets.
plural of wagerer
present participle and gerund of wager
plural of wagering
Alternative form of wage slave.
Alternative form of wageman.
plural of wagesman
A firm that has no choice over its wages and must accept those of the general market.
Work done to earn a wage.
Capable of wagging.
A wakizashi.
A native or inhabitant of the city of Wagga Wagga, New South Wales, Australia.
plural of waggel
A surname.
plural of Waggener
plural of waggery
plural of wagger
Droll behaviour characteristic of a wag.
A surname.
comparative form of waggy: more waggy
plural of waggie
superlative form of waggy: most waggy
Misspelling of waggly.
present participle and gerund of wag
With a wagging motion.
plural of wagging
plural of waggin
witty, jocular, like a wag
In a waggish manner.
simple past and past participle of waggle
One who, or that which, waggles.
plural of waggler
plural of waggle
comparative form of waggly: more waggly
superlative form of waggly: most waggly
present participle and gerund of waggle
plural of waggling
Alternative form of wagonage.
simple past and past participle of waggon
Dated spelling of wagoneer.
Alternative spelling of wagoner.
plural of waggoner
present participle and gerund of waggon
Dated form of wagonry.
plural of waggon
Alternative spelling of wagonway.
Alternative form of wag-halter.
A surname from Middle English.
plural of Waghorn
A town (Große Kreisstadt) in Karlsruhe district, Baden-Württemberg, Germany.
Alternative form of Wageman.
Any of a group of peptides found in the venom of the snake Tropidolaemus wagleri.
plural of waglerin
plural of Wagler
plural of Wagley
A petty wag or joker.
plural of wagling
plural of Wagman
Of, or characteristic of Richard Wagner, or his music; (by extension) of epic dimensions.
The philosophical and artistic ideals put forward by the composer and theatre director Richard Wagner.
An adherent of Wagner's musical methods.
A combined phosphate and fluoride of iron and magnesium.
To make to conform to the philosophical and artistic ideals put forward by the composer and theatre director Richard Wagner.
plural of Wagnon
A sleeping car, often used in international trains in continental Europe; the Wagons-Lits company also ran dining cars.
Able to be traversed by wagon.
The transport of goods by wagon.
plural of wagonage
simple past and past participle of wagon
One who drives a wagon.
plural of wagoneer
Someone who drives a wagon.
plural of wagoner
A small wagon.
plural of wagonet
A kind of four-wheeled horse-drawn carriage, normally uncovered.
The amount that will fit in a wagon.
plural of wagonful
present participle and gerund of wagon
Without a wagon or wagons.
Resembling or characteristic of a wagon.
A male wagoner.
plural of wagonman
simple past and past participle of wagon
Alternative spelling of wagoner.
plural of wagonner
present participle and gerund of wagon
Conveyance by means of a wagon or wagons.
plural of wagonful
A railway designed for use by trams or wagons.
plural of wagonway
The work of transporting goods on a wagon.
An enclosed area for wagons and draught animals.
A rogue; a rascal; a scoundrel.
Alternative spelling of wagpastie.
Waggish.
A surname from Middle English.
A surname.
plural of Wagstaff
A wag or wit; a joker.
plural of wagster
Any of various small passerine birds, principally of genus Motacilla, of the Old World, notable for their long tails.
plural of wagtail
Synonym of wag-wanton (“quaking grass”).
plural of wagwant
The people of Ugweno in Tanzania.
Modifying the resonance of musical notes to produce the effect of a human voice.
simple past and past participle of wah-wah
plural of wah-wah
Archaic spelling of Wahhabi.
plural of Wahabee
Alternative form of Wahhabism.
plural of Wahabi
Alternative form of Wahhabism.
Alternative form of Wahhabite.
Alternative form of Wahhabite.
plural of Wahabite
plural of Wahabit
Alternative spelling of wahala.
Dated form of Wakanda.
A wolflike cryptid reported from Nahanni Valley in the Northwest Territories of Canada.
plural of waheela
plural of waheeny
Dated form of wahine.
God as conceived by Sikhism.
A Meitei surname from Manipuri
A town in the Shire of Indigo, north eastern Victoria, Australia.
An adherent of Wahhabism (Sunni Islamic fundamentalist reform movement).
plural of Wahhabi
A Sunni Islamic fundamentalist reform movement based on the teachings of Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab (c. 1703–1792), followed primarily in Saudi Arabia and Qatar.
a follower of Wahhabism; a Wahhabite.
A follower of Wahhabism, a fundamentalist movement of Islam.
To make Wahhabi.
A clan or class of Eastern Africa, especially Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda and Burundi.
plural of wahine
plural of wahini
Wellington Phoenix Women, the primarily Porirua-based women's team of New Zealand football club Wellington Phoenix
A surname from Swedish.
plural of Wahlberg
plural of Wahlen
plural of Wahler
A surname from Swedish.
plural of Wahlgren
A surname from Swedish.
A surname from Swedish.
Alternative form of Waalubal.
plural of wahmen
A band within the Santee division of the Dakota people.
A band within the Santee division of the Dakota people.
A locality in the Shire of Strathbogie, north eastern Victoria, Australia.
A suburb of Sydney in the Hornsby council area and the Ku-ring-gai council area, New South Wales, Australia.
plural of wahtuh
Alternative form of Waiwai.
A shield volcano and the second highest point on the island of Kauaʻi in the Hawaiian Islands.
A census-designated place in Honolulu County, Hawaii, United States.
plural of waiata
An age from 12.7 to 10.9 million years ago, a subdivision of the Miocene.
plural of Waibel
Synonym of Ghibelline.
plural of Waibling
Synonym of Huizhou: the Cantonese-derived name
An article of movable property which has been found, and of which the owner is not known, such as goods washed up on a beach or thrown away by an absconding thief; such items belong to the Crown, which may grant the right of ownership to them to a lord of a manor.
present participle and gerund of waif
Waiflike.
In a waifish manner.
Resembling a waif; apparently homeless, starving, etc.
A language spoken by about 10,000 Kalasha people of the Waigal Valley in Afghanistan's Nuristan Province.
Alternative form of Waigali.
plural of Waight
plural of waigon
Alternative form of Waigali.
A river in Marlborough, New Zealand, which is a tributary of the Wairau River.
A small town in the back country of Southland, New Zealand.
A town in Kapiti Coast district, Wellington region, New Zealand.
A census-designated place in Maui County, Hawaii, United States.
A river in the Waikato region, North Island, New Zealand, emptying into the Tasman Sea; the longest in the country.
A Meitei surname from Manipuri
A beachfront neighborhood of Honolulu, Hawaii, United States.
A suburb in the north of Invercargill, Southland, New Zealand.
A small coastal settlement in northern Hawke's Bay, New Zealand.
Alternative form of Guaycura.
A member of one of the Eel River Athabaskan groups of Native Americans.
plural of Wailaki
Obsolete spelling of wailful.
A female professional mourner
plural of wailer
second-person singular simple present indicative of wail
third-person singular simple present indicative of wail
Sorrowful; mournful.
In a wailful manner.
comparative form of waily: more waily
superlative form of waily: most waily
Pronunciation spelling of wailing.
A loud drawn out scream or howl.
With a wailing sound.
plural of wailing
Lamentation; loud weeping; wailing.
plural of wailment
Characterised or marked by wailing
A census-designated place, the county seat of Maui County, on the island of Maui, Hawaii, United States.
A census-designated place in Honolulu County, Hawaii, United States.
A town in Waimate district, in South Canterbury, New Zealand.
Obsolete form of wayment.
simple past and past participle of waiment
third-person singular simple present indicative of waiment
A wagon; a four-wheeled cart for hauling loads, usually pulled by horses or oxen.
Capable of being ploughed or cultivated; arable; tillable.
Gainage; the team and implements necessary for the cultivation of land.
plural of wainage
Wood allotted to a tenant for use in repairing wagons.
Short for Wainfleet All Saints and Wainfleet St Mary, neighbouring settlements and civil parishes in Lincolnshire, England.
A quantity that fills a wain; wagonful.
plural of wainful
present participle and gerund of wain
A wagoner.
plural of Wainman
plural of wainman
A surname.
A rope for binding a load on a wagon.
plural of wainrope
Obsolete form of wainscot.
An area of wooden (especially oaken) panelling on the lower part of a room’s walls.
Alternative spelling of wainscotting.
plural of wainscot
A surname.
plural of wainful
A person who builds and repairs wagons.
A small town in Ruapehu district, Manawatū-Whanganui region, New Zealand.
A census-designated place in the ʻEwa District on the island of Oʻahu in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States.
A settlement in Hurunui district, north Canterbury, New Zealand.
An age from 55.5 to 53 million years ago, a subdivision of the Eocene.
An age from 3.6 to 3 million years ago, a subdivision of the Pliocene.
A small settlement and geothermal area in Taupo district, Waikato region, in the centre of the North Island, near the town of Taupo, New Zealand, and the location of Wairakei Power Station.
A monoclinic-prismatic mineral containing aluminum, calcium, hydrogen, oxygen, and silicon.
A lake in southern North Island, New Zealand.
An isometric-hexoctahedral steel gray mineral containing cobalt and iron.
A locality in the Shire of East Gippsland, eastern Victoria, Australia.
present participle and gerund of wair
A Meitei surname from Manipuri
plural of wairua
A surname from Finnish.
plural of Waisanen
Synonym of Oweina (“language”).
Pain in the waist; backache of the lower back.
A belt (a band or strap) worn around the waist, especially when part of a larger article, such as a backpack.
A boat carried in the waist of a vessel.
Having some specific type of waist.
A seaman stationed in the waist of a warship.
plural of waister
That which goes at the waist (of a person, as on a garment, or of an object).
plural of waisting
Having no waist
Long enough to reach one's waist.
A wrapper (loose robe) worn around the waist.
Contraction of wait + till.
Alternative spelling of waitlist.
Implementing a wait/notify functionality.
A local government district in South Canterbury, and North Otago, New Zealand.
An age from 25.2 to 21.7 million years ago, a subdivision of the Oligo-Miocene.
A locality in the Bay of Islands Northland region, North Island, New Zealand.
A suburb of Sydney in the Hornsby council area, New South Wales, Australia.
Eye dialect spelling of wait a sec.
A locality in the Rural City of Swan Hill, north western Victoria, Australia
second-person singular simple past indicative of wait
plural of waitee
The work of a waiter, attending on somebody.
The realm or sphere of waiters.
Having a waiter or waiters.
gerund of waiter: the work of a waiter, serving customers at their tables with food and drink.
Characteristic of a waiter or waitress.
plural of waiter
plural of Waiters
second-person singular simple present indicative of wait
third-person singular simple present indicative of wait
plural of Waithe
A period of limbo faced by young college graduates in developing countries, in which activities belonging to the traditional transition into adulthood, such as marriage and buying a home, are put off to allow the securing of employment or money.
Pronunciation spelling of waiting.
present participle and gerund of wait
So as to wait; hesitatingly or loiteringly.
plural of waiting
A waiting list.
plural of waitlist
A surname.
A cryptid of New Zealand, said variously to be a mammal resembling an otter, platypus or beaver, and to live in rivers.
A robotic or mechanical waiter.
plural of waitron
Collectively, staff employed to wait at tables in a restaurant.
Alternative form of wait state.
Capable of being waived, of being given a waiver.
To relinquish (a right etc.); to give up claim to; to forgo.
Allowed by waiver; permitted by exception granted from otherwise applicable rules.
Agent noun of waiver; one who waivers.
plural of waiverer
plural of waivery
present participle and gerund of waiver