Stuck on your letter tiles? Enter them below to see every word you can play in Words With Friends. More importantly, you’ll discover English words you’ve never seen before — turning every game into a vocabulary-building session.
How to Use This Tool
- Enter the letters on your rack (up to 15 letters).
- Use ‘?’ or space for blank tiles (up to 2 blanks).
- Use Advanced Options to filter by word length, starting or ending letters.
- Results show words sorted by point value with the highest-scoring options first.
Turn Every Game Into a Vocabulary Lesson
The best way to learn new words is to encounter them in context. When this tool shows you a word you don’t recognize, take 10 seconds to learn it — that’s one new word added to your vocabulary permanently.
Example: You have the letters D-E-I-R-N-G
You might think of “diner” or “grind.” But the tool also shows “engird” (to surround) and “ringed” (having rings). Two new words learned in seconds.
High-Scoring Words Worth Learning
Words With Friends assigns different point values than Scrabble. Here are high-value words that are also useful in everyday English:
5-point letters (J, X, Z):
JAZZY (lively and exciting), FUZZY (blurry or soft), FIZZY (bubbly), DIZZY (feeling unsteady), PROXY (representative)
4-point letters (H, W, Y):
WORTHY (deserving), HIGHWAY (main road), WHISKEY (spirit drink), WAYWARD (unpredictable)
Differences from Scrabble
Words With Friends uses a different board layout and tile values than Scrabble. The dictionaries also differ slightly — some words valid in WWF aren’t accepted in Scrabble, and vice versa. Our tool uses the official WWF dictionary so every result is guaranteed valid.
Tips for ESL Players
Start with short words:
2-letter or 3-letter words are essential for connecting to existing words on the board. Learn common ones: QI, ZA, XI, JO, KA, and you’ll always have a move available.
Use bonus squares strategically:
DL (Double Letter), TL (Triple Letter), DW (Double Word), TW (Triple Word). Placing high-value letters on bonus squares multiplies your score.
Play parallel words:
Place your word next to an existing word to create multiple small words simultaneously. This technique requires knowing many 2-letter words but can score massive points.
Learn from every game:
After each game, review the words your opponent played that you didn’t know. Look them up, learn their meanings, and add them to your vocabulary. This is how competitive players build their word knowledge.