9-letter words containing d, o, w, n
- new-found — newly found or discovered: newfound friends.
- newground — a tract of land recently cleared for cultivation.
- newsboard — bulletin board.
- newshound — A newspaper reporter.
- no wonder — it is not surprising
- nonwinged — without wings; not winged
- northward — Also, northwards, northwardly. toward the north.
- note down — write for reference
- oceanward — Toward the ocean.
- old woman — elderly lady
- over-wind — to wind beyond the proper limit; wind too far: He must have overwound his watch.
- overdrawn — Past participle of overdraw.
- overdrown — (obsolete, transitive) To wet or drench to excess.
- overwound — to wind beyond the proper limit; wind too far: He must have overwound his watch.
- own brand — Own brands are products which have the trademark or label of the shop which sells them, especially a supermarket chain. They are normally cheaper than other popular brands.
- pastedown — the leaf of an endpaper that is pasted to the inside of the front or back cover of a book.
- phasedown — an act or instance of phasing down; gradual reduction.
- pipe down — a hollow cylinder of metal, wood, or other material, used for the conveyance of water, gas, steam, petroleum, etc.
- play down — a dramatic composition or piece; drama.
- plop down — If you plop down or plop yourself down somewhere, you sit down quickly but gently.
- plow wind — a wind squall with a narrow, straight path of advance.
- portadown — a town in S Northern Ireland, in the district of Armagh. Pop: 25 958 (2001)
- powdering — a thin sprinkling of something on a surface
- powderman — a person in charge of explosives, especially in a demolition crew.
- pre-owned — previously owned; used; secondhand: a sale of preowned furs.
- pull down — designed to be pulled down for use: a pull-down bed; a desk with a pull-down front.
- pull-down — designed to be pulled down for use: a pull-down bed; a desk with a pull-down front.
- push-down — a sudden, downward shift by an aircraft in the direction of the flight path.
- rainbowed — containing, resembling, or involving a rainbow
- ramp down — decrease effort, work
- raw-boned — having little flesh, especially on a large-boned frame; gaunt.
- ride down — to sit on and manage a horse or other animal in motion; be carried on the back of an animal.
- road town — a town on SE Tortola, in the NE West Indies: capital of the British Virgin Islands.
- rosenwald — Julius, 1862–1932, U.S. businessman and philanthropist.
- rosinweed — any coarse, North American, composite plant of the genus Silphium, having a resinous juice and stalkless, paired leaves.
- roundwood — small pieces of timber (about 5–15 cm, or 2–6 in.) in diameter; small logs
- roundworm — any nematode, especially Ascaris lumbricoides, that infests the intestine of humans and other mammals.
- rowdiness — a rough, disorderly person.
- sapanwood — a dyewood yielding a red color, produced by a small, East Indian tree, Caesalpinia sappan, of the legume family.
- satinwood — the satiny wood of an East Indian tree, Chloroxylon swietenia, of the rue family, used especially for making furniture.
- scaledown — a reduction in size, quantity, or activity according to a fixed scale or proportion: a scaledown of military expenditures.
- scrubdown — an act or instance of scrubbing, especially a thorough washing of a surface or object: The decks of the ship get a scrubdown every morning.
- scrumdown — the forming of a scrum in rugby
- seldshown — seldom shown
- send down — to cause, permit, or enable to go: to send a messenger; They sent their son to college.
- shadowing — a dark figure or image cast on the ground or some surface by a body intercepting light.
- shakedown — extortion, as by blackmail or threats of violence.
- shootdown — the attack and destruction of an aircraft in flight.
- shut down — to put (a door, cover, etc.) in position to close or obstruct.
- slag down — to give a verbal lashing to