| ENWIND | • enwind v. (Transitive) To wind about (something); to encircle. • ENWIND v. to enwrap, also INWIND. |
| INWICK | • inwick n. (Curling) A stroke in which the stone rebounds from the inside edge of another stone, and then slides… • INWICK v. (Scots) to perform a certain stroke in the game of curling. |
| INWIND | • inwind v. To wind inward. • INWIND v. to enwrap, also ENWIND. |
| INWITH | • INWITH prep. (Scots) within. |
| INWITS | • INWIT n. (archaic) inward sense; mind. |
| UNWILL | • unwill n. Lack or absence of will; willlessness; undesire. • unwill v. (Transitive) To annul or reverse by an act of the will. • UNWILL v. to deprive of will. |
| UNWIND | • unwind v. (Transitive) To separate (something that is wound up). • unwind v. (Transitive, obsolete) To disentangle. • unwind v. (Intransitive, colloquial) To relax; to chill out; to rest and become relieved of stress. |
| UNWIRE | • unwire v. (Transitive) To undo the wiring of. • UNWIRE v. to take the wire from. |
| UNWISE | • unwise adj. Not wise; lacking wisdom. • UNWISE adj. not wise. |
| UNWISH | • unwish v. (Transitive, obsolete) To wish not to be; to destroy by wishing. • unwish v. (Transitive) To undo a wish. • UNWISH v. (Shakespeare) to wish not to be. |
| UNWIST | • unwist adj. (Archaic) unknown, unrecognized. • UNWIST adj. (archaic) not known. |
| UNWITS | • unwits v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of unwit. • UNWIT v. (Shakespeare) to deprive of wit. |
| UNWIVE | • unwive v. (Transitive, archaic) To divest of a wife; to divorce (someone) from his wife. • unwive v. (Transitive, archaic) To cause (a woman) no longer to be a wife. • UNWIVE v. to deprive of a wife. |