wacked

adjective
  1. completely exhausted.
    I'm not staying long—I'm whacked
  2. under the influence of drugs.
    a sixteen-
... Read more »

wad

noun
  1. An amorphous, compact mass.
    Our cat loves to play with a small wad of paper.
  2. A substantial pile (
... Read more »

wadded

verb
  1. To crumple or crush into a compact, amorphous shape or ball.
    She wadded up the scrap of paper and
... Read more »

waddled

verb

To walk with short steps, tilting the body from side to side.

waded

verb, past tense
  1. walk with effort through water or another liquid or viscous substance.
    he waded out
... Read more »

wafered

verb, past tense

fasten or seal (a letter or document) with a wafer.

late Middle English: from an Anglo-... Read more »

waffled

verb

To smash.

verb
  1. (of birds) To move in a side-to-side motion and descend (lose altitude) before landing.
... Read more »

wafted

verb, past tense
  1. (with reference to a scent, sound, etc.) pass or cause to pass gently through the air.
... Read more »

waged

verb
  1. To wager, bet.
  2. To expose oneself to, as a risk; to incur, as a danger; to venture; to hazard.
  3. To
... Read more »

wagered

verb, past tense
  1. risk (a sum of money or valued item) against someone else's on the basis of the outcome
... Read more »

wagged

verb
  1. To swing from side to side, such as of an animal's tail, or someone's head, to express disagreement
... Read more »

waggled

verb, past tense
  1. move or cause to move with short quick movements from side to side or up and down.
    his
... Read more »

wagonload

noun
  1. an amount of something that can be carried in one wagon.
    a wagonload of food