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7-letter words containing d, o, w, n

  • mixdown — to combine (substances, elements, things, etc.) into one mass, collection, or assemblage, generally with a thorough blending of the constituents.
  • nayword — a proverb or byword
  • newbold — a male given name.
  • nonword — a word that is not recognized or accepted as legitimate, as one produced by a spelling or typographical error.
  • norward — Archaic form of northward.
  • norwood — a town in E Massachusetts.
  • nowaday — Existing nowadays; current, present; contemporary.
  • nowdays — Eye dialect of nowadays.
  • nutwood — any of various nutbearing trees, as the hickory or walnut.
  • oldowan — of or designating a Lower and Middle Pleistocene industrial complex of eastern Africa, characterized by assemblages of stone tools about two million years old that are the oldest well-documented artifacts yet known.
  • oldtown — The historic district of a city or town.
  • onwards — toward a point ahead or in front; forward, as in space or time.
  • outwind — to exceed in fitness and stamina
  • pindown — a now-discredited system of disciplining children used in some British children's homes during the 1980s, which included the use of physical or emotional punishments such as locking a child in a room for long periods or making a child wear just underwear
  • rewound — an act or instance of rewinding.
  • rowland — a masculine name
  • rubdown — a massage, especially after exercise or a steam bath.
  • rundown — a quick review or summary of main points of information, usually oral: This brief rundown of past events will bring you up to date.
  • senwood — the light-colored wood of a Japanese tree, Kalopanax pictus (or K. ricinifolium), used for veneer in the manufacture of plywood.
  • snowdon — a mountain in NW Wales: highest peak in Wales. 3560 feet (1085 meters).
  • sundown — sunset, especially the time of sunset.
  • swindon — a town and unitary authority in Wiltshire, in S England.
  • swounds — swoon.
  • towmond — twelvemonth.
  • unbowed — not bowed or bent.
  • uncowed — to frighten with threats, violence, etc.; intimidate; overawe.
  • unowned — of, relating to, or belonging to oneself or itself (usually used after a possessive to emphasize the idea of ownership, interest, or relation conveyed by the possessive): He spent only his own money.
  • unwooed — not wooed; not courted
  • unwound — to reduce the tension of; relax: to unwind a person with a drink.
  • waconda — (in Native American culture) the supreme spirit
  • wendigo — Alternative spelling of windigo.
  • widgeon — any of several common freshwater ducks related to the mallards and teals in the genus Anas, having metallic green flight feathers, a white wing patch, and a buff or white forehead, including A. penelope of Eurasia and North Africa, A. sibilatrix of South America, and the baldpate, A. americana, of North America.
  • windigo — (in the folklore of the Ojibwa and other Indians) a cannibalistic giant, the transformation of a person who has eaten human flesh.
  • windore — a window
  • windows — an opening in the wall of a building, the side of a vehicle, etc., for the admission of air or light, or both, commonly fitted with a frame in which are set movable sashes containing panes of glass.
  • windowy — resembling a window
  • windoze — Microsloth Windows
  • windrow — a row or line of hay raked together to dry before being raked into heaps.
  • windsor — (since 1917) a member of the present British royal family. Compare Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (def 1).
  • wonders — Desire or be curious to know something.
  • wondred — causing wonder; amazing
  • woodbin — a bin, box, or the like for storing wood fuel.
  • wooding — the hard, fibrous substance composing most of the stem and branches of a tree or shrub, and lying beneath the bark; the xylem.
  • woodman — woodsman (def 1).
  • woodsonCarter Godwin, 1875–1950, U.S. historian and publisher: pioneer in modern black studies.
  • wording — a unit of language, consisting of one or more spoken sounds or their written representation, that functions as a principal carrier of meaning. Words are composed of one or more morphemes and are either the smallest units susceptible of independent use or consist of two or three such units combined under certain linking conditions, as with the loss of primary accent that distinguishes black·bird· from black· bird·. Words are usually separated by spaces in writing, and are distinguished phonologically, as by accent, in many languages.
  • wordnet — (artificial intelligence, linguistics) A semantically structured lexical database.
  • workend — a weekend where more time is spent doing housework than on relaxing or leisure pursuits
  • wouldnt — (informal, nonstandard) Alternative form of wouldn't.
  • wounded — suffering injury or bodily harm, as a laceration or bullet wound: to bandage a wounded hand.
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