9-letter words containing o, w, e
- copsewood — the smallest trees, and the bushes and ferns, of a coppice
- copywrite — (rare) To write the copy (or text) of an advertisement; to have a job as a copywriter.
- corkscrew — A corkscrew is a device for pulling corks out of bottles.
- cornrowed — Simple past tense and past participle of cornrow.
- cow horse — cow pony.
- cow vetch — a climbing plant, Vicia cracca, of the legume family, of Eurasia and North America, having elongated clusters of violet-purple flowers.
- cowardice — Cowardice is cowardly behaviour.
- cowardise — Obsolete spelling of cowardice.
- cowfeeder — a tenant of a small dairy farm
- cowfishes — Plural form of cowfish.
- cowkeeper — (archaic) cowherd.
- coworkers — a fellow worker; colleague.
- cowperson — (politically correct, rare) a cowhand of any gender.
- cowritten — to coauthor.
- creamwove — (of wove paper) cream-coloured and even-surfaced
- crestwood — a city in E Missouri.
- crew sock — Usually, crew socks. short, thick casual socks usually ribbed above the ankles.
- crewwoman — A female crewmember.
- crosswire — Crosshair; reticle.
- crosswise — Crosswise means diagonally across something.
- crow over — to utter the characteristic cry of a rooster.
- crowberry — a low-growing N temperate evergreen shrub, Empetrum nigrum, with small purplish flowers and black berry-like fruit: family Empetraceae
- crowdedly — In a crowded manner.
- croweater — (Australia, slang) A person from South Australia.
- crownless — Without a crown.
- crowsteps — Plural form of crowstep.
- cup towel — a dishtowel.
- cupflower — any of various plants belonging to the genus Nierembergia, of the nightshade family, having showy tubular or bell-shaped flowers.
- dawsonite — a mineral that is made up of sodium and aluminium hydrous carbonate and occurs in crystalline form
- dayflower — any of various tropical and subtropical plants of the genus Commelina, having jointed creeping stems, narrow pointed leaves, and blue or purplish flowers which wilt quickly: family Commelinaceae
- dayworker — a person who works during the daytime
- dead wood — People or things that have been used for a very long time and that are no longer considered to be useful can be referred to as dead wood.
- deadwoods — Plural form of deadwood.
- death row — If someone is on death row, they are in the part of a prison which contains the cells for criminals who have been sentenced to death.
- deathblow — a thing or event that destroys life or hope, esp suddenly
- deep down — If you know something deep down or deep down inside, you know that it is true, but you are not always conscious of it or willing to admit it to yourself.
- demiworld — demimonde (defs 4, 5).
- desk work — work done at a desk.
- devilwood — a variety of small broadleaf evergreen tree, Osmanthus americanus, native to the southeast US
- dew point — the temperature at which water vapour in the air becomes saturated and water droplets begin to form
- deworming — Present participle of deworm.
- dire wolf — an extinct wolf, Canis dirus, widespread in North America during the Pleistocene Epoch, having a larger body and a smaller brain than the modern wolf.
- disavowed — Deny any responsibility or support for.
- disendows — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disendow.
- dishtowel — a towel for drying dishes.
- dog whelk — any of several carnivorous, marine gastropods of the family Nassidae.
- doorwomen — Plural form of doorwoman.
- dow jones — financial news firm
- dowdiness — The characteristic of being dowdy; frumpiness; plainness.
- dowelling — Present participle of dowel.