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Weighbridge

A weighing machine on which loaded carts may be weighed; platform scales.

Weigher

One who weighs; specifically, an officer whose duty it is to weigh commodities.

Weighlock

A lock, as on a canal, in which boats are weighed and their tonnage is settled.

Weighmaster

One whose business it is to weigh ore, hay, merchandise, etc.; one licensed as a public weigher.

Weightiness

The quality or state of being weighty; weight; force; importance; impressiveness.

Weightless

Having no weight; imponderable; hence, light.

Weird

To foretell the fate of; to predict; to destine to.

Weirdness

The quality or state of being weird.

Weismannism

The theories and teachings in regard to heredity propounded by the German biologist August Weismann, esp. in regard to germ plasm as the basis of heredity and the impossibility of transmitting acquired characteristics; -- often called neo-Darwinism.

Weka

A New Zealand rail (Ocydromus australis) which has wings so short as to be incapable of flight.

Wekau

A small New Zealand owl (Sceloglaux albifacies). It has short wings and long legs, and lives chiefly on the ground.

Wel-begone

Surrounded with happiness or prosperity.

Welcome

To salute with kindness, as a newcomer; to receive and entertain hospitably and cheerfully; as, to welcome a visitor; to welcome a new idea.

Welcomeness

The quality or state of being welcome; gratefulness; agreeableness; kind reception.

Welcomer

One who welcomes; one who salutes, or receives kindly, a newcomer.

Weld

The state of being welded; the joint made by welding.

Welder

One who welds, or unites pieces of iron, etc., by welding.

Wele

Prosperity; happiness; well-being; weal.

Weleful

Producing prosperity or happiness; blessed.

Welfare

Well-doing or well-being in any respect; the enjoyment of health and the common blessings of life; exemption from any evil or calamity; prosperity; happiness.

Welkin

The visible regions of the air; the vault of heaven; the sky.

Well

To pour forth, as from a well.

Well-being

The state or condition of being well; welfare; happiness; prosperity; as, virtue is essential to the well-being of men or of society.

Well-born

Born of a noble or respect able family; not of mean birth.

Well-bred

Having good breeding; refined in manners; polite; cultivated.

Well-favored

Handsome; wellformed; beautiful; pleasing to the eye.

Well-informed

Correctly informed; provided with information; well furnished with authentic knowledge; intelligent.

Well-known

Fully known; generally known or acknowledged.

Well-read

Of extensive reading; deeply versed; -- often followed by in.

Well-seen

Having seen much; hence, accomplished; experienced.

Wellat

The king parrakeet See under King.

Welldoer

One who does well; one who does good to another; a benefactor.

Welldoing

A doing well; right performance of duties. Also used adjectively.

Welldrain

To drain, as land; by means of wells, or pits, which receive the water, and from which it is discharged by machinery.

Wellingtonia

A name given to the /big trees/ (Sequoia gigantea) of California, and still used in England. See Sequoia.

Wellspring

A fountain; a spring; a source of continual supply.

Wellwisher

One who wishes another well; one who is benevolently or friendlily inclined.

Wels

The sheatfish; -- called also waller.

Welsbach

Of or pertaining to Auer von Welsbach or the incandescent gas burner invented by him.

Welsh

To cheat by avoiding payment of bets; -- said esp. of an absconding bookmaker at a race track. To avoid dishonorably the fulfillment of a pecuniary obligation.

Welsher

One who cheats at a horse race; one who bets, without a chance of being able to pay; one who receives money to back certain horses and absconds with it.

Weltanschauung

Lit., world view; a conception of the course of events in, and of the purpose of, the world as a whole, forming a philosophical view or apprehension of the universe; the general idea embodied in a cosmology.

Welte

imp. of Weld, to wield.

Welter

Of, pertaining to, or designating, the most heavily weighted race in a meeting; as, a welter race; the welter stakes.

Welterweight

A weight of 28 pounds (one of 40 pounds is called a heavy welterweight) sometimes imposed in addition to weight for age, chiefly in steeplechases and hurdle races.

Weltschmertz

Sorrow or sadness over the present or future evils or woes of the world in general; sentimental pessimism.

Welwitschia

An African plant (Welwitschia mirabilis) belonging to the order Gnetaceae. It consists of a short, woody, topshaped stem, and never more than two leaves, which are the cotyledons enormously developed, and at length split into diverging segments.

Wem

To stain; to blemish; to harm; to corrupt.

Wemless

Having no wem, or blemish; spotless.

Wen

An indolent, encysted tumor of the skin; especially, a sebaceous cyst.

Wen Wyn Wynn

One of the runes (/) adopted into the Anglo-Saxon, or Old English, alphabet. It had the value of modern English w, and was replaced from about a. d. 1280 at first by uu, later by w.

Wen-li

The higher literary idiom of Chinese, that of the canonical books and of all composition pretending to literary standing. It employs a classical or academic diction, and a more condensed and sententious style than Mandarin, and differs also in the doubling and arrangement of words.

Wench

To frequent the company of wenches, or women of ill fame.

Wencher

One who wenches; a lewd man.

Wend

A large extent of ground; a perambulation; a circuit.

Wendic

The language of the Wends.

Wends

A Slavic tribe which once occupied the northern and eastern parts of Germany, of which a small remnant exists.

Wenny Wennish

Having the nature of a wen; resembling a wen; as, a wennish excrescence.

Wenona

A sand snake (Charina plumbea) of Western North America, of the family Erycidae.

Went

Course; way; path; journey; direction.

Wentletrap

Any one of numerous species of elegant, usually white, marine shells of the genus Scalaria, especially Scalaria pretiosa, which was formerly highly valued; -- called also staircase shell. See Scalaria.

Wep

imp. of Weep.

Wept

imp. p. p. of Weep.

Were

To guard; to protect.

Weregild

The price of a man's head; a compensation paid of a man killed, partly to the king for the loss of a subject, partly to the lord of a vassal, and partly to the next of kin. It was paid by the murderer.

Werewolf

A person transformed into a wolf in form and appetite, either temporarily or permanently, whether by supernatural influences, by witchcraft, or voluntarily; a lycanthrope. Belief in werewolves, formerly general, is not now extinct.

Wernerian

Of or pertaining to A. G. Werner, The German mineralogist and geologist, who classified minerals according to their external characters, and advocated the theory that the strata of the earth's crust were formed by depositions from water; designating, or according to, Werner's system.

Wernerite

The common grayish or white variety of soapolite.

Weroole

An Australian lorikeet (Ptilosclera versicolor) noted for the variety of its colors; -- called also varied lorikeet.

Wesleyan

One who adopts the principles of Wesleyanism; a Methodist.

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