DWILE | • dwile n. The beer-soaked cloth thrown in the game of dwile flonking. • DWILE n. a floorcloth or mop. |
DWILES | • dwiles n. Plural of dwile. • DWILE n. a floorcloth or mop. |
OUTWILE | • outwile v. (Rare, transitive) To surpass in wile or cunning. • OUTWILE v. to surpass in wiling. |
OUTWILED | • outwiled v. Simple past tense and past participle of outwile. • OUTWILE v. to surpass in wiling. |
OUTWILES | • outwiles v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outwile. • OUTWILE v. to surpass in wiling. |
SWILE | • SWILE n. a seal (marine animal). |
SWILER | • SWILER n. (Canadian) in Newfoundland, a seal hunter. |
SWILERS | • SWILER n. (Canadian) in Newfoundland, a seal hunter. |
SWILES | • SWILE n. a seal (marine animal). |
WILE | • wile n. (Usually in the plural) A trick or stratagem practiced for ensnaring or deception; a sly, insidious artifice. • wile v. (Transitive) To entice or lure. • wile v. Misspelling of while (“to pass the time”). |
WILED | • wiled v. Simple past tense and past participle of wile. • WILE v. to beguile, also WYLE. |
WILEFUL | • wileful adj. Full of wiles; deceitful. • WILEFUL adj. full of wiles. |
WILES | • wiles n. Plural of wile. • Wiles prop.n. A surname transferred from the nickname. A patronymic form of Wile. • WILE v. to beguile, also WYLE. |