| wile |
a trick or stratagem intended to mislead, entice, or entrap. [4 definitions] |
| will1 |
used to indicate a future action or condition. [9 definitions] |
| will2 |
the faculty of consciousness that allows one to choose intentionally a course of action or to make a deliberate decision. [14 definitions] |
| willed |
having a will, usu. of a specified kind. |
| willful |
according to one's will or intentions; intentional; deliberate. [2 definitions] |
| William Beebe |
U.S. naturalist, explorer, and author, who in 1934 made a record oceanic descent of 3,028 feet (923 meters) in a bathysphere (b.1877--d.1962). |
| William Clark |
U.S. co-leader with Meriwether Lewis of an expedition to explore the uncharted American West, from Missouri to Oregon, from 1804 to 1807 (b.1770--d.1838). |
| William Shakespeare |
English poet and playwright (b.1564--d.1616). |
| William Tell |
in Swiss legend, a patriot who was forced to shoot an apple off his son's head with a bow and arrow. |
| William the Conqueror |
the Duke of Normandy who was king of England from 1066 to 1087; William I (b.1027--d.1087). |
| willies |
feelings of nervousness or fright; jitters (usu. prec. by the). |
| willing |
inclined or disposed; not objecting or resisting; ready. [3 definitions] |
| willingness |
the condition or being inclined or disposed to do something, without objecting or resisting; readiness. |
| williwaw |
a sudden gust or spell of hard wind, esp. of cold mountain air blowing down toward a seacoast. |
| will-o'-the-wisp |
a false or unattainable hope or goal that leads one on. [2 definitions] |
| willow |
any of various deciduous trees and shrubs that have narrow leaves, some of whose long flexible twigs are used in weaving baskets, making furniture, and the like. [2 definitions] |
| willow-wild |
(poetic) frail and thin, as coined by the poet and author Langston Hughes. |
| willowy |
thin and flexible; pliant. [3 definitions] |
| will power |
one's strength of will, mind, or determination; self-control. |
| willy-nilly |
whether one agrees or not; without having a choice; perforce. [2 definitions] |
| wilt |
to lose freshness and become limp, as plant matter. [5 definitions] |