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9-letter words containing n, o, r, e, w

  • tirewoman — a lady's maid.
  • unbrowned — (of food) not browned
  • uncrowded — filled to excess; packed.
  • uncrowned — not crowned; not having yet assumed the crown.
  • underflow — to move along in a stream: The river flowed slowly to the sea.
  • undergown — a gown worn under another article of clothing
  • underwood — woody shrubs or small trees growing among taller trees.
  • underwool — underfur.
  • underwork — to do less work on than is necessary or required: to underwork an idea.
  • undrowned — not drowned
  • unworried — having or characterized by worry; concerned; anxious: Their worried parents called the police.
  • wagoneers — Plural form of wagoneer.
  • walker-on — someone who has a small part in a play or theatrical entertainment, esp one without any lines
  • warbonnet — Alternative spelling of war bonnet.
  • warm tone — a yellow, brown, olive, or reddish tinge in a black-and-white print.
  • warmonger — a person who advocates, endorses, or tries to precipitate war.
  • watertown — a town in E Massachusetts, on the Charles River, near Boston: U.S. arsenal.
  • waterworn — worn by the action of water; smoothed by the force or movement of water.
  • wattersonHenry ("Marse Henry") 1840–1921, U.S. journalist and political leader.
  • wavefront — a surface, real or imaginary, that is the locus of all adjacent points at which the phase of oscillation is the same.
  • weaponeer — Military. a person who prepares an atomic bomb for detonation.
  • wear down — to carry or have on the body or about the person as a covering, equipment, ornament, or the like: to wear a coat; to wear a saber; to wear a disguise.
  • weedgrown — Overgrown with weeds.
  • weisshorn — a mountain in S Switzerland, in the Alps. 14,804 feet (4512 meters).
  • well-born — born of a good, noble, or highly esteemed family.
  • well-worn — showing the effects of extensive use or wear: well-worn carpets.
  • wentworthThomas, 1st Earl of Strafford, Strafford, 1st Earl of.
  • werelions — Plural form of werelion.
  • werowance — (historical) A chief of an American Indian tribe in colonial Virginia and Maryland.
  • whereinto — Into which.
  • whereunto — (archaic or formal, interrogative) unto what; to what purpose.
  • whereupon — Immediately after which.
  • whirlbone — Alternative form of whirl-bone.
  • wind rose — a map symbol showing, for a given locality or area, the frequency and strength of the wind from various directions.
  • windborne — Carried by the wind.
  • windhover — the kestrel, Falco tinnunculus.
  • windpower — Power harnessed or generated from the wind.
  • windrowed — Simple past tense and past participle of windrow.
  • windrower — a farm implement used to mow a field and arrange the mown crop in windrows.
  • wingovers — Plural form of wingover.
  • winsorize — (statistics) To transform statistics of a batch or sample by transforming extreme values.
  • wirebound — Held together with a binding of wire.
  • wiresonde — an instrument carried aloft by a captive balloon and sending temperature and humidity data over a wire cable.
  • wolverene — Alternative spelling of wolverine.
  • wolverine — Also called carcajou. a stocky, carnivorous North American mammal, Gulo luscus, of the weasel family, having blackish, shaggy hair with white markings.
  • womaniser — Non-Oxford British standard spelling of womanizer.
  • womanizer — a philanderer.
  • wonderboy — (informal) A male child prodigy, or (loosely) a talented male of any age.
  • wonderers — to think or speculate curiously: to wonder about the origin of the solar system.
  • wonderful — excellent; great; marvelous: We all had a wonderful weekend.
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