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7-letter words containing c, r, e, w

  • aircrew — The aircrew on a plane are the pilot and other people who are responsible for flying it and for looking after any passengers who are on it.
  • becrawl — to crawl all over
  • becrowd — to crowd greatly with something
  • berwick — James Fitzjames, Duke of Berwick. 1670–1734, marshal of France and illegitimate son of James II of England. He led French forces during the War of the Spanish Succession (1701–14)
  • cawdrey — Robert. 16th–17th-century English schoolmaster and lexicographer: compiled the first English dictionary (A Table Alphabeticall) in 1604
  • chewers — Plural form of chewer.
  • chewier — Comparative form of chewy.
  • chowder — Chowder is a thick soup containing pieces of fish.
  • clowder — a collective term for a group of cats
  • concrew — to grow together
  • coowner — Someone who owns something together with one or more other people.
  • cowdrey — (Michael) Colin, Baron. 1932–2000, English cricketer. He played for Kent and in 114 Test matches (captaining England 27 times)
  • cowered — to crouch, as in fear or shame.
  • cowherb — a European caryophyllaceous plant, Saponaria vaccaria, having clusters of pink flowers: a weed in the US
  • cowherd — a person employed to tend cattle
  • cowries — Plural form of cowrie.
  • cowrite — to write (something) in collaboration with another writer
  • cowrote — Simple past tense and past participle of cowrite.
  • cowtree — a South American moraceous tree, Brosimum galactodendron, producing latex used as a substitute for milk
  • cracowe — a boot with a long sharply pointed toe, fashionable in the 14th century
  • crawled — Simple past tense and past participle of crawl.
  • crawler — A crawler is a computer program that visits websites and collects information when you do an Internet search.
  • crawley — a town in S England, in NE West Sussex: designated a new town in 1956. Pop: 100 547 (2001)
  • crewcut — very short haircut
  • crewing — a group of persons involved in a particular kind of work or working together: the crew of a train; a wrecking crew.
  • crewman — A crewman is a member of a crew.
  • crewmen — Plural form of crewman.
  • crowded — If a place is crowded, it is full of people.
  • crowder — One who crowds or pushes.
  • crowdie — a porridge of meal and water; brose
  • crowley — a city in S Louisiana.
  • crowned — characterized by or having a crown (often used in combination): a crowned signet ring; a low-crowned fedora.
  • crowner — a promotional label consisting of a shaped printed piece of card or paper attached to a product on display
  • crownet — a coronet.
  • curfews — Plural form of curfew.
  • curlews — Plural form of curlew.
  • cutware — tools used in cutting, as knives or blades.
  • decrown — to divest (a person) of the role of monarch
  • escrows — Plural form of escrow.
  • lerwick — a city in and the administrative center of the Shetland Islands, N of Scotland.
  • mcgwireMark David, born 1963, U.S. baseball player.
  • pc-ware — Pejorative term for software full of PC-isms on a machine with a more capable operating system.
  • powerpc — (processor, standard)   (PPC) A RISC microprocessor designed to meet a standard which was jointly designed by Motorola, IBM, and Apple Computer (the PowerPC Alliance). The PowerPC standard specifies a common instruction set architecture (ISA), allowing anyone to design and fabricate PowerPC processors, which will run the same code. The PowerPC architecture is based on the IBM POWER architecture, used in IBM's RS/6000 workstations. Currently IBM and Motorola are working on PowerPC chips. The PowerPC standard specifies both 32-bit and 64-bit data paths. Early implementations were 32-bit (e.g. PowerPC 601); later higher-performance implementations were 64-bit (e.g. PowerPC 620). A PowerPC has 32 integer registers (32- or 64 bit) and 32 floating-point (IEEE standard 64 bit) floating-point registers. The POWER CPU chip and PowerPC have a (large) common core, but both have instructions that the other doesn't. The PowerPC offers the following features that POWER does not: Support for running in little-endian mode. Addition of single precision floating-point operations. Control of branch prediction direction. A hardware coherency model (not in Book I). Some other floating-point instructions (some optional). The real time clock (upper and lower) was replaced with the time base registers (upper and lower), which don't count in sec/ns (the decrementer also changed). 64-bit instruction operands, registers, etc. (in 64 bit processors). See also PowerOpen, PowerPC Platform (PReP).
  • raceway — Chiefly British. a passage or channel for water, as a millrace.
  • recrown — to crown (a king, queen, etc) again
  • renwickJames, 1818–95, U.S. architect.
  • scowler — to draw down or contract the brows in a sullen, displeased, or angry manner.
  • scowrer — a hooligan
  • screwed — fastened with screws.
  • screwup — a mistake or blunder: The package was delayed through an addressing screwup.

On this page, we collect all 7-letter words with C-R-E-W. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 7-letter word that contains in C-R-E-W to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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