Wild-yam
noun
1.
any of several uncultivated yams, especially Dioscorea villosa, of the U.S., having a woody, tuberous root.
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- Wile  noun 1. a trick, artifice, or stratagem meant to fool, trap, or entice; device. 2. wiles, artful or beguiling behavior. 3. deceitful cunning; trickery. verb (used with object), wiled, wiling. 4. to beguile, entice, or lure (usually followed by away, from, into, etc.): The music wiled him from his study. Verb phrases 5. wile away, […] 
- Wiles  noun 1. a trick, artifice, or stratagem meant to fool, trap, or entice; device. 2. wiles, artful or beguiling behavior. 3. deceitful cunning; trickery. verb (used with object), wiled, wiling. 4. to beguile, entice, or lure (usually followed by away, from, into, etc.): The music wiled him from his study. Verb phrases 5. wile away, […] 
- Wilf hey  person The person who originally developed Report Program Generator and coined the phrase GIGO (garbage in: garbage out). In 2004, after more than forty years in computing, he was writing for PC Plus magazine in the UK and doing Wilf’s programmers workshop amongst other things. He died on 2007-01-01 after a long illness. (2007-01-06) 
- Wilfred  noun 1. a male given name: from Old English words meaning “will” and “peace.”. 
- Wilfrid  noun 1. a male given name: from Old English words meaning “will” and “peace.”. noun 1. Saint. 634–709 ad, English churchman; bishop of York (?663–?703). At the Synod of Whitby (664) he argued successfully that Celtic practices should be replaced by Roman ones in the English Church. Feast day: Oct 12 
