W
W.
- Wain, declining of the moon - wan, pale and sickly - wand, a riding rod - waits, the city-music - weights, ounces and pounds - wares, several commodities - ware, a place so called - wear, sorts of apparel - were, as you were - walls, of a city or town - wales, a principality - wail, to grieve and lament - weal, the public good - wheale, a rising or pimple - wheel, of a coach or cart - white, emblem of innocence - wight, an Island so called - wild, rude and untamed - weild, a great sword - weald, of Kent and Sussex - way, to walk in - weight, in scales - wright, as wheel-wright - write, with a pen - waist, the middle part - wast, desolate and useless - wale, great thred in stuffs - bewail, to bemoan and grieve - wakes, country feasts - awake, to rouse up - walk, to go leasurly - walks, for recreation - wardship, over an orphan - worship, to say to an Esquire - warp, to cleave like boards - warp, yarn, woven - wey, of salt of cheese - whey, and buttermilke - weel, to catch fish - wee'l, for we will - wicked, ill given, debaucht - wicket, an halfe door - win, to get a wager - wind, that blows - wine, squeezed from grapes - witch, th[•]t bewitcheth - which, who, or that - woad, dying stuff - wood, fewel, and timber - wo, alas, misery - woo, to be a suitor - wrap, to fold up - rap, to give a small blow - rape, to force a maid - wring, to squeez hard - ring, for a finger - wrote, I have written - rote, to say without book - wrought, to do work