Old English | sp | English |
Wulder | n | Glory, honour. |
Wumme | intj | "Woe is me." |
Wun | vb | To dwell, habitate, wone |
Wune-ness | n | Habitation; habitat. |
Wurp | n | A stone's throw. 2. a glance of the eye. |
Wurtle | adj | Worthy, deserved, merited. |
Wush | vb | Preterite of wash |
Wunsome | adj | Dialect form of winsome: joyful, joyous. 2. smart, trimly dressed; lively. 2. twisted (North); ill-natured. |
Wye | n | In OE. chiefly, and in later use only in poetic use : 1. one who fights, a fighting man. 2. warrior, soldier. 3. a noble, vigorous man, hence gen. a man or person. 4. applied to the Devil, as 'be the wye that all the world wrought.' 5. a woman, lady. |
Wyn | n | Apllied to the old English runic (=w) |
Wynd | n | lane, narrow street or passage. |
Wyn-head | n | The higher end of a narrow street. |
Wyning | n | A leg band. 2. a small, strong rope for tying sails. |
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