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WELL-WISH, n. [well and wish.] A wish of happiness.
WELL-WISHER, n. [supra.] One who wishes the good of another.
WELLADAY, alas, Johnson supposes to be a corruption of welaway, which see.
WELLBEING, n. [well and being.] Welfare; happiness; prosperity; as, virtue is es...
WELLFARE, is now written welfare.
WELSH, a. [G., foreign, strange, Celtic.] Pertaining to the Welsh nation. WELSH ...
WELT, n. [See Wall .] A border; a kind of hem or edging, as on a garment or piec...
WELTER, v.t. [G., L.] To roll, as the body of an animal; but usually, to roll or...
WELTERING, ppr. Rolling; wallowing; as in mire, blood, or other filthy matter.
WEM, n. A spot; a scar. WEM , v.t to corrupt.
WEN, n. An encysted swelling or tumor; also, a fleshy excrescence growing on ani...
WENCH, n. 1. A young woman. [Little used.] 2. A young woman of ill fame. 3. In A...
WENCHER, n. A lewd man.
WENCHING, ppr. Frequenting women of ill fame.
WEND, v.i. 1. To go; to pass to or from. [Obsolete, except in poetry; but its pr...
WENNEL, n. A weanel. [See Weanel .]