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7-letter words containing i, t, w

  • outwait — to surpass in waiting or expecting; wait longer than.
  • outwick — to move (a curling stone) so that it strikes against the outer side of a stone that has already been played and turns towards the tee or (of a curling stone) to strike another stone in this manner
  • outwile — a trick, artifice, or stratagem meant to fool, trap, or entice; device.
  • outwill — to demonstrate a stronger will than
  • outwind — to exceed in fitness and stamina
  • outwing — to fly faster or more skilfully than
  • outwish — to wish more or more strongly than
  • outwith — (chiefly Scotland, Northern England) Outside; beyond; outside of.
  • outwits — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outwit.
  • pit saw — a large saw used, esp. formerly, to cut timber lengthwise and worked by two men, one standing above the log, the other in a pit below it
  • retwist — to twist again
  • rewrite — to write in a different form or manner; revise: to rewrite the entire book.
  • ribwort — English plantain.
  • ringtaw — a game of marbles in which players attempt to knock other players' marbles out of a ring
  • s twist — a direction of the twist in yarns, from top left to bottom right, resembling the long stroke of the letter S.
  • saw pit — a place for pit sawing.
  • saw-pit — a place for pit sawing.
  • sitwellDame Edith, 1887–1964, English poet and critic.
  • ski tow — Also called rope tow. a type of ski lift in which skiers are hauled up a slope while grasping a looped, endless rope driven by a motor.
  • sopwith — Sir Thomas Octave Murdoch. 1888–1989, British aircraft designer, who built the Sopwith Camel biplane used during World War I. He was chairman (1935–63) of the Hawker Siddeley Group, which developed the Hurricane fighter
  • stewing — to cook (food) by simmering or slow boiling.
  • stowing — Nautical. to put (cargo, provisions, etc.) in the places intended for them. to put (sails, spars, gear, etc.) in the proper place or condition when not in use.
  • sweetie — Informal. sweetheart.
  • swifter — moving or capable of moving with great speed or velocity; fleet; rapid: a swift ship.
  • swiftie — a trick, ruse, or deception
  • swiftly — moving or capable of moving with great speed or velocity; fleet; rapid: a swift ship.
  • switchy — moving as a switch
  • swithed — Chiefly British Dialect. immediately; quickly.
  • swither — a state of confusion, excitement, or perplexity.
  • swithinSaint, died a.d. 862, English ecclesiastic: bishop of Winchester 852?–862.
  • switzer — Swiss (def 2).
  • taichow — a city in central Jiangsu province, in E China.
  • taniwha — a legendary Māori monster
  • tawhiri — a small New Zealand tree, Pittosporum tenuifolium, with wavy green glossy leaves
  • tawnier — of a dark yellowish or dull yellowish-brown color.
  • taxiway — any surface area of an airport used for taxiing airplanes to and from a runway, parking apron, terminal, etc.
  • taxwise — regarding tax
  • thawing — the act or state of thawing or melting
  • thwaite — a piece of land cleared from forest or reclaimed from wasteland
  • tideway — a channel in which a tidal current runs.
  • tinware — articles made of tin plate.
  • tinwork — something made of tin.
  • towline — a line, hawser, or the like, by which anything is or may be towed.
  • townies — a resident of a town, especially a nonstudent resident of a college town.
  • townish — of or relating to qualities or features typical of or befitting a town or city.
  • trishaw — pedicab.
  • twibbon — a company which provides users with an icon which they can paste over an avatar or profile photo on a social networking site, indicating the user's support for a given cause, group, brand, etc.
  • twibill — a mattock with one arm like that of an adz and the other like that of an ax.
  • twiddle — to turn about or play with lightly or idly, especially with the fingers; twirl.
  • twiddly — characterized by or involving twiddling
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