werewolf
Plural: werewolves
Noun
- A person who can transform into a wolf, often under a full moon.
- a monster able to change appearance from human to wolf and back again
- A person who is transformed or can transform into a wolf or a wolflike human, often said to do so during a full moon.
Examples
- The word WEREWOLF appeared mysteriously on the board, like a creature of the night.
Origin / Etymology
From Middle English werwolf, from Old English werewulf, from Proto-West Germanic *werawulf, from Proto-West Germanic *wer (“man”) + *wulf (“wolf”). By surface analysis, were- + wolf. Cognate with Dutch weerwolf, Low German Warwulf, German Werwolf, Danish varulv, Swedish varulv, and even possibly Finnish vironsusi.
Compare also French garou, in loup-garou, French dialectal gairou, varou (“werewolf”), Medieval Latin gerulphus, garulphus (“werewolf”), all from Germanic, probably Frankish *werawulf.
Synonyms
loup-garou, lycanthrope, wolfman, man-wolf
Scrabble Score: 17
werewolf: valid Scrabble (US) TWL Wordwerewolf: valid Scrabble Word in Merriam-Webster MW Dictionary
werewolf: valid Scrabble Word in International Collins CSW Dictionary