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7-letter words containing a, s, w, h

  • schwarz — Hermann Amandus [her-mahn ah-mahn-doo s] /ˈhɛr mɑn ɑˈmɑn dʊs/ (Show IPA), 1843–1921, German mathematician.
  • seahawk — a twin-engine, four-seat U.S. Navy helicopter used for surveillance, targeting, and antisubmarine warfare.
  • shadowy — resembling a shadow in faintness, slightness, etc.: shadowy outlines.
  • shallow — of little depth; not deep: shallow water.
  • shalwar — loose, pajamalike trousers worn by both men and women in India and southeast Asia.
  • shawlie — a working-class woman, esp one who wears a shawl
  • shawnee — a member of an Algonquian-speaking tribe formerly in the east-central U.S., now in Oklahoma.
  • shawwal — the tenth month of the Muslim calendar.
  • shipway — the structure that supports a ship being built.
  • showman — a person who presents or produces a show, especially of a theatrical nature.
  • shulwar — loose, pajamalike trousers worn by both men and women in India and southeast Asia.
  • so what — the true nature or identity of something, or the sum of its characteristics: a lecture on the whats and hows of crop rotation.
  • swahili — a member of a Bantu people of Zanzibar and the neighboring coast of Africa.
  • swarthy — (of skin color, complexion, etc.) dark.
  • swather — a farming implement that cuts and binds some grain crops into windrows
  • swathes — to wrap, bind, or swaddle with bands of some material; wrap up closely or fully.
  • te shawAnna Howard, 1847–1919, U.S. physician, reformer, and suffragist, born in England.
  • trishaw — pedicab.
  • wagashi — Traditional Japanese confectionery in various forms, often served with tea.
  • waggish — like a wag; roguish in merriment and good humor; jocular: Fielding and Sterne are waggish writers.
  • wahines — Plural form of wahine.
  • waifish — Waiflike.
  • wallahs — Plural form of wallah.
  • wampish — to wave about or flop to and fro.
  • wannish — somewhat wan.
  • warmish — having or giving out a moderate degree of heat, as perceived by the senses: a warm bath.
  • warship — a ship built or armed for combat purposes.
  • wash up — the act or process of washing with water or other liquid: to give the car a wash.
  • washbag — a bag for toiletries, toothbrushes, etc
  • washday — the day set apart in a household for washing clothes: Monday is always washday at our house.
  • washers — Plural form of washer.
  • washery — a plant at a mine where water or other liquid is used to remove dirt from a mineral, esp coal
  • washing — the act or process of washing with water or other liquid: to give the car a wash.
  • washita — Ouachita.
  • washout — a washing out of earth, gravel, etc., by water, as from an embankment or a roadway by heavy rain or by a flash flood.
  • washpot — A pot which holds water for washing.
  • washrag — washcloth.
  • washtub — a tub for use in washing clothes, linens, etc.
  • waspish — Waspy.
  • wasteth — Archaic third-person singular form of waste.
  • watches — to be alertly on the lookout, look attentively, or observe, as to see what comes, is done, or happens: to watch while an experiment is performed.
  • weakish — rather weak.
  • wealths — a great quantity or store of money, valuable possessions, property, or other riches: the wealth of a city.
  • wearish — withered
  • whalers — Plural form of whaler.
  • wharves — Spinning. a wheel or round piece of wood on a spindle, serving as a flywheel or as a pulley.
  • whatevs — Whatevs is a rude way of saying 'whatever', and shows that the speaker does not respect what someone has just said to them.
  • whatsis — a thing or object whose name one does not know or cannot recall.
  • whatsit — whatsis.
  • whereas — a qualifying or introductory statement, especially one having “whereas” as the first word: to read the whereases in the will.
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