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7-letter words containing g, w

  • swaging — a tool for bending cold metal to a required shape.
  • swagman — a tramp, hobo, or vagabond.
  • swedger — a sweet
  • swigger — an amount of liquid, especially liquor, taken in one swallow; draught: He took a swig from the flask.
  • swingby — act of spacecraft passing close to planet
  • swinged — to singe.
  • swinger — a person or thing that swings.
  • swingle — a single person who is highly active socially and sexually; an unmarried person who swings.
  • swiping — a strong, sweeping blow, as with a cricket bat or golf club.
  • thalweg — a line, as drawn on a map, connecting the lowest points of a valley.
  • thawing — the act or state of thawing or melting
  • tunghwa — Tonghua.
  • twanged — to give out a sharp, vibrating sound, as the string of a musical instrument when plucked.
  • twanger — a person or object that twangs
  • twangle — to make a twanging sound, esp on a musical instrument
  • twigged — to look at; observe: Now, twig the man climbing there, will you?
  • twiggen — made of twigs
  • twigger — a person or animal that gives birth to many babies
  • twiglet — a small twig
  • twigloo — a temporary shelter made from twigs, branches, leaves, etc
  • twining — a strong thread or string composed of two or more strands twisted together.
  • ungrown — not fully developed
  • unwaged — not paid a salary
  • unwedge — a piece of hard material with two principal faces meeting in a sharply acute angle, for raising, holding, or splitting objects by applying a pounding or driving force, as from a hammer. Compare machine (def 3b).
  • unwrung — not twisted or wrung
  • upswing — an upward swing or swinging movement, as of a pendulum.
  • viewing — an instance of seeing or beholding; visual inspection.
  • wadding — a small mass, lump, or ball of anything: a wad of paper; a wad of tobacco.
  • waftage — the act of wafting.
  • wafting — to carry lightly and smoothly through the air or over water: The gentle breeze wafted the sound of music to our ears.
  • wagabee — a woman who aspires to be the wife or girlfriend of a famous sportsman
  • wagashi — Traditional Japanese confectionery in various forms, often served with tea.
  • wagered — something risked or staked on an uncertain event; bet: to place a wager on a soccer match.
  • wagerer — A person who wagers or bets.
  • waggery — the action, spirit, or language of a wag; roguish or droll humor: the waggery of Shakespeare's clowns.
  • wagging — to move from side to side, forward and backward, or up and down, especially rapidly and repeatedly: a dog wagging its tail.
  • waggish — like a wag; roguish in merriment and good humor; jocular: Fielding and Sterne are waggish writers.
  • waggled — Simple past tense and past participle of waggle.
  • waggler — a float only the bottom of which is attached to the line
  • waggles — Plural form of waggle.
  • waggons — Plural form of waggon.
  • wagoner — a person who drives a wagon.
  • wagtail — any of numerous small, chiefly Old World birds of the family Motacillidae, having a slender body with a long, narrow tail that is habitually wagged up and down.
  • wailing — to utter a prolonged, inarticulate, mournful cry, usually high-pitched or clear-sounding, as in grief or suffering: to wail with pain.
  • wainage — produce derived from agriculture
  • waining — Present participle of wain.
  • wairing — Present participle of wair.
  • waiting — an act or instance of waiting or awaiting; delay; halt: a wait at the border.
  • waiving — to refrain from claiming or insisting on; give up; forgo: to waive one's right; to waive one's rank; to waive honors.
  • walking — considered as a person who can or does walk or something that walks: The hospital is caring for six walking patients. He's walking proof that people can lose weight quickly.
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