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Showing words for WHIZZER using the English dictionary

7 Letter Words for Whizzer

whizzer

4 Letter Words for Whizzer

heir, hire, hizz, weir, weri, whir, whiz, wire

3 Letter Words for Whizzer

eir, hei, her, hew, hie, hir, ire, reh, rei, rew, rez, rhe, rie, riz, wer, whr, wir, wiz, zer, ziz

Definitions for Whizzer

[1] something that whizzes.
[2] a centrifugal machine for drying sugar, grain, clothes, etc.
[3] Andrew Dickson, 1832–1918, U.S. diplomat and pioneer of land-grant education.
[4] Byron R(aymond) Whizzer , 1917–2002, U.S. lawyer and jurist: associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court 1962–93.
[5] Edmund, born 1940, U.S. novelist.
[6] Edward Douglass, 1845–1921, U.S. jurist: chief justice of the U.S. 1910–21.
[7] Edward H(ig·gins), II [hig -inz] /ˈhɪg ɪnz/ , 1930–67, U.S. astronaut: first American to walk in space 1965.
[8] E(l·wyn) B(rooks) [el -win] /ˈɛl wɪn/ , 1899–1985, U.S. humorist and poet.
[9] George Leonard, 1838–95, U.S. choral conductor.
[10] Gilbert, 1720–93, English clergyman, naturalist, and writer.
[11] Patrick (Victor Mar·tin·dale) [mahr -tn-deyl] /ˈmɑr tnˌdeɪl/ , 1912–90, Australian writer, born in England: Nobel Prize 1973.
[12] Stanford, 1853–1906, U.S. architect.
[13] Stewart Edward, 1873–1946, U.S. novelist.
[14] T(erence) H(an·bur·y) [han -buh -ree] /ˈhæn bə ri/ , 1896–1964, English novelist.
[15] Theodore H., 1915–86, U.S. journalist and writer.
[16] Walter Francis, 1893–1955, U.S. civil-rights leader and writer: executive secretary of the NAACP 1931–55.
[17] William A(l·an·son) [al -uh  n-suh  n] /ˈæl ən sən/ , 1870–1937, U.S. neurologist, psychiatrist, and writer.
[18] William Allen, 1868–1944, U.S. journalist.
[19] a person, esp one of European ancestry, from a human population having light pigmentation of the skin
[20] denoting or relating to a White person or White people
[21] Gilbert. 1720–93, English clergyman and naturalist, noted for his Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne (1789)
[22] Jimmy. born 1962, English snooker player
[23] Marco Pierre. born 1961, British chef and restaurateur
[24] Patrick (Victor Martindale ). 1912–90, Australian novelist: his works include Voss (1957), The Eye of the Storm (1973), and A Fringe of Leaves (1976): Nobel prize for literature 1973
[25] T (erence ) H (anbury ). 1906–64, British novelist: author of the Arthurian sequence The Once and Future King (1939–58)
[26] Willard (Wentworth ) (ˈwɪlɑːd). born 1946, British operatic bass, born in Jamaica
[27] having no hue due to the reflection of all or almost all incident light Compare black (def. 1)
[28] (of light, such as sunlight) consisting of all the colours of the spectrum or produced by certain mixtures of three additive primary colours, such as red, green, and blue
[29] comparatively white or whitish-grey in colour or having parts of this colour white clover
[30] (of an animal) having pale-coloured or white skin, fur, or feathers
[31] bloodless or pale, as from pain, emotion, etc
[32] (of hair, a beard, etc) silvery or grey, usually from age
[33] benevolent or without malicious intent white magic
[34] colourless or transparent white glass
[35] capped with or accompanied by snow a white Christmas
[36] (sometimes capital) counterrevolutionary, very conservative, or royalist Compare Red (def. 2)
[37] blank, as an unprinted area of a page
[38] (of wine) made from pale grapes or from black grapes separated from their skins
[39] (of coffee or tea) with milk or cream (of bread) made with white flour
[40] physics having or characterized by a continuous distribution of energy, wavelength, or frequency white noise
[41] informal honourable or generous
[42] (of armour) made completely of iron or steel (esp in the phrase white harness )
[43] rare morally unblemished
[44] rare (of times, seasons, etc) auspicious; favourable
[45] poetic , or archaic having a fair complexion; blond
[46] bleed white to deprive slowly of resources
[47] whiter than white extremely clean and white informal very pure, honest, and moral
[48] a white colour
[49] the condition or quality of being white; whiteness
[50] the white or lightly coloured part or area of something
[51] the white the viscous fluid that surrounds the yolk of a bird's egg, esp a hen's egg; albumen
[52] anatomy the white part (sclera) of the eyeball
[53] any of various butterflies of the family Pieridae See large white, small white, cabbage white
[54] chess draughts a white or light-coloured piece or square (usually capital) the player playing with such pieces
[55] anything that has or is characterized by a white colour, such as a white paint or pigment, a white cloth, a white ball in billiards
[56] an unprinted area of a page
[57] archery the outer ring of the target, having the lowest score a shot or arrow hitting this ring
[58] poetic fairness of complexion
[59] in the white (of wood or furniture) left unpainted or unvarnished
[60] (usually foll by out) to create or leave white spaces in (printed or other matter)
[61] obsolete to make or become white

Words nearby Whizzer

whiz-bang, whiz-kid, whizz, whizz kid, whizz-bang, whizzer, whizzo, whizzy, who, who knows what, who'd

Origin of Whizzer

First recorded in 1880–85; whiz1 + -er1

Word origin for Whizzer

teOld English hwīt; related to Old Frisian hwīt, Old Saxon hwīt, Old Norse hvītr, Gothic hveits, Old High German hwīz (German weiss )