Word |
Meaning |
Synonyms |
Antonyms |
Usage of Word |
Wade
(verb) |
- Walk through a
substance, such as water, that impedes movement
|
|
- Avoid
- Ignore
- Conclude
- Jump
- Stop
|
To wade is to walk through a shallow are of water or another
liquid or viscous substance.
Example:
"Sometimes the researchers wade into the sea".
|
Waffle
(noun) |
- Speak equivocally
about an issue
|
- Falter
- Vibrate
- Oscillate
- Waver
- Linger
|
|
Waffle is defined as to go back or forth on an opinion in speaking or writing.
Example:
"The manager waffled when he is asked to see the dean".
|
Waft
(verb) |
- Move gently (in air or in seas) by wind or waves
- Ex. Leaves wafting past the window
|
- Streamer
- Falg
- Float
- Design
- Ornament
|
|
To waft is defined as to cause something to move smoothly
through air or over water.
Example:
"The smell of chicken soup wafted up to my bedroom".
|
Wag
(verb) |
- Shake repeatedly from side to side
- Ex. The dog wagged its tail
- N: humorous
person
- Wit
|
- Truant
- Wiggle
- Agitation
- Humorist
- Movement
|
|
Wag is defined as to move a body part quickly back and forth or up and down over and over again.
Example:
"The dog wagged its tail".
|
Wage
(verb) |
- Begin and continue (a war)
|
- Fight
- Struggle
- Contend
- Conflict
- Battle
|
|
To wage is to conduct or carry on a campaign against something.
Example:
"There is a Russian proverb which states, Make peace with
people; wage war with your sins".
|
Waggish
(adjective) |
- Humorous
- Mischievous
- Tricky
|
- Amusing
- Bantering
- Funny
- Hilarious
- Joking
|
- Grave
- Sedate
- Solemn
- Staid
- Grim
|
Humorous in a playful,
mischievous, or
facetious manner.
Example:
"A waggish disposition that often got him into trouble as a child".
|
Waif
(noun) |
- Homeless child or animal
- Ex. Waifs and strays
|
- Street child
- Individual kid
- Stray
- Nestling
- Tyke
|
|
The definition of a waif is a homeless, abandoned animal or person.
Example:
"A homeless cat wandering the streets alone".
|
Waive
(verb) |
- Give up temporarily
- Yield
- N. Waiver: waiving a right or claim
- Document that waives a right or claim
|
- Relinquish
- Forego
- Abandon
- Discard
- Put away
|
- Approve
- Carryout
- Claim
- Acknowledge
- Forward
|
Waive is defined as to give up your right to something or to
determine that someone else can postpone fulfilling an obligation.
Example:
"Tom waived his right to a lawyer".
|
Wake
(noun) |
- Trail of ship or other object through water
Path of something that has gone before.
|
- Consequence
- Awake
- Religious rite
- Wave
- Terra firma
|
|
The definition of a wake is the trail left in the water by a moving ship or boat.
Example:
"Hunger followed in the wake of the war".
|
Wallow
(verb) |
- Roll in mud
- Indulge in
- (of a ship) roll in a rough sea
- Become helpless
- Ex. Wallow in the mud/luxury
|
- Billow
- Rejoice
- Jump for joy
- Soar up
- Walk in air
|
|
To wallow is defined as to roll in or indulge.
Example:
"Elephants wallowing in the river".
|
Wan
(adjective) |
- Having a pale or sickly color
Pallid
|
- Colorless
- Unanimated
- Weak
- Anemic
- Bloodless
|
- Colorful
- Distinct
- Flushed
- Healthy
- Strong
|
The definition of wan is a very tired, sickly or pale appearance.
Example:
"She looks a little wan after all that tiring work".
|
Wanderlust
(noun) |
|
- Seafaring
- Navigation
- Wayfaring
- Voyage
- Touring
|
|
Wanderlust is a very strong desire to travel.
Example:
"Wanderlust has led her to many different parts of the world".
|
Wane
(verb) |
- Decrease in size or strength
(after being full)
- Grow gradually to an end
- Ex. The moon waxes and wanes every month
|
- Go down
- Decline
- Diminish
- Fall
- Lessen
|
- Wax
- Increase
- Cover
- Lipid
- Super molecule
|
Wane means to decrease in power,
size or intensity.
Example:
"The scandal caused her popularity to wane".
|
Wangle
(verb) |
- Achieve by cleverness or trick
- Wiggle out
- Fake
- Ex. She tried to wangle an invitation to the party.
|
- Manage
- Manipulate
- Misrepresent
- Spoof
- Falsify
|
- Leave alone
- Louse up
- Mangle
- Blow
- Flub
|
Wangle is to obtain or achieve by cleverness or deceit,
especially in persuading someone.
Example:
"He wangled the job even though he had no training".
|
Wanton
(adjective) |
- Unrestrained
- Gratuitously cruel
- Willfully malicious
- Unchaste
- Sexually improper
- Promiscuous
- Ex. Wanton spending/killing
- CF. Having no just cause
|
- Motiveless
- Promiscuous
- Sluttish
- Unprovoked
- Unmotivated
|
- Moral
- Observant
- Gentle
- Thoughtful
- Wise
|
The definition of wanton is undisciplined,
reckless or malicious.
Example:
"She showed a wanton disregard for her friend’s feelings".
|
Warble
(verb) |
|
- Descant
- Quaver
- Yodel
- Trill
- Verbalize
|
|
Warble is to sing melodiously, with trills,
quavers, runs, etc., as a bird does.
Example:
"Birds were warbling in the trees".
|
Ward
(noun) |
- Administrative division of a city
- Division in a hospital or prison
- Incompetent person placed under the protection of a guardian
- V: guard
- Ward off: avert
|
- Cellblock
- Hospital ward
- Businessman
- Economist
- Environmentalist
|
- Offense
- Aggression
- Assault
- Offensive
- Attack
|
Ward is a section in a hospital for patients or a section
in a prison or the sections into which a city or town is divided
for the purposes of an election.
Example:
"He works in the cancer ward".
|
Warp
(verb) |
|
- Buckle
- Distort
- Garble
- Utter
- Mangle
|
|
To warp is to distort something.
Example:
"There is a risk that woodwork near the pipes may warp and split".
|
Warrant
(noun) |
- Justification
- Written order that serves as authorization
(esp. A judicial writ)
- Ex. Search/death warrant
- V: justify
- Guarantee
|
- Authorization
- Warranty
- Endorsement
- Approval
- Commendation
|
- Revocation
- Refusal
- Prohibition
- Proscription
- Interdiction
|
Warrant is a document issued by a court that gives the police the power to do something.
Example:
"The police had a warrant for his arrest".
|
Warranted
(verb) |
|
- Guaranteed
- Justified
- Endorsed
- Supported
- Sanctioned
|
- Undeserved
- Undue
- Unfair
- Unjustified
- Unwarranted
|
It is a simple past tense and past participle of warrant.
Example:
"It was bad enough that his actions warranted her decision to leave, but now she actually feared him".
|
Warranty
(noun) |
- Guarantee
- Assurance by seller
|
- Assurance
- Pledge
- Dedication
- Commitment
- Warrantee
|
- Disagreement
- Breach
- Uncertainty
- Break
|
Warranty is a written statement that promises the good condition of a product and states that the maker is responsible for repairing or replacing the product usually for a certain period of time after its purchase.
Example:
"The stereo came with one-year warranty".
|
Warren
(noun) |
- Tunnels in which rabbits live
- Overcrowded living area
- Crowded conditions in which people live
|
- Animal group
- Community
- Rabbit tunnel
- Tunnel
- Territory
|
|
The definition of warren is an area crowded with nesting rabbits.
Example:
"A warren of narrow hallways".
|
Wary
(adjective) |
|
- Mistrustful
- Leery
- Un wasteful
- Suspicious
- Doubting
|
- Careless
- Indiscreet
- Negligent
- Heedless
- Inattentive
|
Wary is not having or showing complete trust in someone or something that could be dangerous or cause trouble.
Example:
"The smile instantly faded and a wary expression took its place".
|
Wastrel
(noun) |
|
- Prodigal
- Profligate
- Squander
- Consumer
- Waster
|
- Niggard
- Economizer
- Cheapskate
- Conserver
- Tightwad
|
Wastrel is a person who wastes, especially one who wastes money.
Example:
"He ended up being a wastrel and a drunkard".
|
Waver
(verb) |
- Move or swing back and forth
- Be uncertain or unsteady in decision or movement
- Ex. Wavering between accepting and refusing
|
- Swing
- Move back
- Sway
- Flicker
- Spark
|
- Dive
- Plunge
- Advance
- Continue
- Persist
|
Waver is to go back and forth between choices. Or to go back and forth in a unsteady way.
Example:
"The kite wavered in the wind".
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