wristband |
any of various bands that fasten around the wrist. |
wristlet |
a protective band worn around the wrist. [2 definitions] |
wristlock |
a wrestling hold in which one person tightly grips the wrist and twists the arm of another. |
wrist pin |
a pin that joins the end of a connecting rod to a piston, wheel, or the like. |
wrist watch |
a timepiece attached to a strap or band and worn around the wrist. |
writ |
a formal legal order, issued by a court or other public authority, directing the person to whom it is addressed to do or not do some specified act. [2 definitions] |
writable |
combined form of write. |
write |
to form (letters, words, symbols, or characters) on a surface with a pen, pencil, typewriter, or other instrument. [8 definitions] |
write-down |
in finance, a reduction in the book value of an inventory item or other asset because of depreciation or a decrease in market price. |
write down |
to write (something) in order to make a record of it or study it at a later time. |
write-in |
a candidate who has not been formally nominated and whose name is not on the ballot but must be added by the voter. [3 definitions] |
write-off |
the removal of an item from a business account, usu. as a loss. [2 definitions] |
write off |
to consider to be lost or not worthy of consideration. |
write out |
to write in full. |
writer |
one who writes or is capable of writing. [2 definitions] |
writer's cramp |
a cramp in the hand, esp. in the muscles of the thumb and forefinger, that results from prolonged writing. |
write-up |
a usu. favorable report, review, biographical sketch, interview, or the like published in a newspaper or magazine. |
write up |
to record or describe in writing, esp. in detail. |
writhe |
to twist and turn the body as in pain, discomfort, struggle, or embarrassment; squirm. [5 definitions] |
writing |
the process, art, or profession of one who writes. [4 definitions] |
writ of certiorari |
a legal order sent from a higher court to a lower court, requesting, for review, the transcript of a case tried in the lower court. |