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9-letter words containing e, n, w, i

  • sweelinck — Jan Pieters [yahn pee-tuh rs] /yɑn ˈpi tərs/ (Show IPA), or Jan Pieterszoon [yahn pee-tuh r-sohn] /yɑn ˈpi tərˌsoʊn/ (Show IPA), 1562–1621, Dutch organist and composer.
  • sweepings — of wide range or scope.
  • sweirness — the state of being slothful
  • sweptwing — (of an aircraft, winged missile, etc.) having sweptback wings.
  • swiftness — moving or capable of moving with great speed or velocity; fleet; rapid: a swift ship.
  • swinburneAlgernon Charles, 1837–1909, English poet and critic.
  • swine flu — a highly contagious form of influenza caused by infection with a filterable virus first isolated from swine.
  • swineherd — a person who tends swine.
  • swinehood — the quality or condition of a swine
  • swing leg — a leg at the end of a hinged rail, swinging out to support a drop leaf.
  • swingbeat — a type of modern dance music that combines soul, rhythm and blues, and hip-hop
  • swingeing — enormous; thumping.
  • swingover — a shift or transfer in attitude, opinion, or the like.
  • swingtree — a whiffletree.
  • tafelwein — German table wine
  • taiwanese — of or relating to Taiwan or its people.
  • take wing — either of the two forelimbs of most birds and of bats, corresponding to the human arms, that are specialized for flight.
  • the twins — the constellation Gemini, the third sign of the zodiac
  • time-worn — worn or impaired by time.
  • tin-white — white, as the color of tin; bluish-white.
  • tirewoman — a lady's maid.
  • towelling — a narrow fabric of cotton or linen, in plain, twill, or huck weave, used for hand towels or dishtowels.
  • town life — the life or lifestyle characteristic of a town or urban area, esp as contrasted with rural or country life
  • twentieth — next after the nineteenth; being the ordinal number for 20.
  • twentyish — around or approximately twenty
  • twin beds — matching single beds in a bedroom or hotel room
  • twin-size — (of a bed) approximately 39 inches (99 cm) wide and between 75 and 76 inches (191 and 193 cm) long; single.
  • twinberry — the partridgeberry, Mitchella repens.
  • underwing — one of the hind wings of an insect.
  • underwire — a wire sewn into the underside of each cup of a brassiere, used for support and shape.
  • untwilled — (of fabric) not twilled
  • untwinned — born two at one birth.
  • untwisted — not twisted.
  • unwarlike — not relating to war
  • unwearied — not wearied; not fatigued.
  • unwearing — gradually impairing or wasting: Reading small print can be wearing on the eyes.
  • unweaving — to undo, take apart, or separate (something woven); unravel.
  • unweighed — not weighed, as for poundage.
  • unwhipped — not whipped
  • unwieldly — not wieldy; wielded with difficulty; not readily handled or managed in use or action, as from size, shape, or weight; awkward; ungainly.
  • unworried — having or characterized by worry; concerned; anxious: Their worried parents called the police.
  • unwrinkle — to smooth the wrinkles from.
  • unwritten — not actually formulated or expressed; customary; traditional.
  • upwelling — an act or instance of welling up: an upwelling of public support; an upwelling of emotion in his voice.
  • viewpoint — a place affording a view of something; position of observation: to sketch a river from the viewpoint of a bluff.
  • viewrinal — a urinal with a small screen at eye level which displays advertisements
  • wackiness — odd or irrational; crazy: They had some wacky plan for selling more books.
  • wagnerian — of, relating to, or characteristic of Richard Wagner or his works: Wagnerian grandeur; a Wagnerian soprano.
  • waistline — the circumference of the body at the waist: exercises to reduce the waistline.
  • waitering — a person, especially a man, who waits on tables, as in a restaurant.
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