| DOWLIEST | • DOWLY adj. (English dialect) dull, low-spirited, also DOWIE. |
| GILTWOOD | • giltwood n. Wood that has been gilded or painted gold. • GILTWOOD adj. made of wood covered with gilt. |
| OUTWILED | • outwiled v. Simple past tense and past participle of outwile. • OUTWILE v. to surpass in wiling. |
| TAILWIND | • tailwind n. A wind that blows in the same direction as the course taken by an aircraft, sailing ship, bird, etc. • tailwind n. (Figurative, by extension) A force that accelerates progress. • tailwind v. Of wind, to blow on a windmill or wind turbine in such a way that wind pressure is exerted on the wrong… |
| TAWDRILY | • tawdrily adv. In a tawdry manner. • TAWDRY adv. cheap, trashy. |
| TWEEDILY | • tweedily adv. In a tweedy manner. • TWEEDY adv. of a refined, traditional, upscale character. |
| TWICHILD | • twichild adj. (Obsolete) Being in second childhood. • TWICHILD n. a person in his or her second childhood. |
| TWIDDLED | • twiddled v. Simple past tense and past participle of twiddle. • TWIDDLE v. to play idly with something. |
| TWIDDLER | • twiddler n. One who twiddles. • TWIDDLER n. one who twiddles. |
| TWIDDLES | • twiddles v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of twiddle. • TWIDDLE v. to play idly with something. |
| TWINKLED | • twinkled v. Simple past tense and past participle of twinkle. • TWINKLE v. to shine with a flickering light. |
| TWIZZLED | • twizzled v. Simple past tense and past participle of twizzle. • TWIZZLE v. to twirl, spin. |
| WHISTLED | • whistled v. Simple past tense and past participle of whistle. • WHISTLE v. to make a shrill sound. |
| WHITTLED | • whittled v. Simple past tense and past participle of whittle. • WHITTLE v. to shave or cut bits from. |
| WILDCATS | • wildcats n. Plural of wildcat. • wildcats v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of wildcat. • wild-cats n. Plural of wild-cat. |
| WITHHELD | • withheld v. Simple past tense and past participle of withhold. • withheld adj. That one has withheld; kept from the possession or knowledge of another. • WITHHOLD v. to hold back. |
| WITHHOLD | • withhold v. (Transitive) To keep (a physical object that one has obtained) to oneself rather than giving it back to its owner. • withhold v. (Transitive) To keep (information, assent etc) to oneself rather than revealing it. • withhold v. (Intransitive) To stay back. (Can we add an example for this sense?) |
| WRITHLED | • writhled adj. (Obsolete) wrinkled. • WRITHLED adj. (archaic) shrivelled. |