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

  • endowered — Simple past tense and past participle of endower.
  • endowment — The action of endowing something or someone.
  • face down — Also, face-down. Informal. a direct confrontation; showdown.
  • fake-down — to lay (a rope) in a coil or series of long loops so as to allow to run freely without fouling or kinking (often followed by down).
  • forwander — to wander far
  • gear down — Machinery. a part, as a disk, wheel, or section of a shaft, having cut teeth of such form, size, and spacing that they mesh with teeth in another part to transmit or receive force and motion. an assembly of such parts. one of several possible arrangements of such parts in a mechanism, as an automobile transmission, for affording different relations of torque and speed between the driving and the driven machinery, or for permitting the driven machinery to run in either direction: first gear; reverse gear. a mechanism or group of parts performing one function or serving one purpose in a complex machine: steering gear.
  • glendowerOwen, 1359?–1416? Welsh rebel against Henry IV of England.
  • good news — someone or something that is positive, encouraging, uplifting, desirable, or the like.
  • goosedown — Down from a goose.
  • greenwood — a city in W South Carolina.
  • grewhound — a greyhound
  • gunpowder — an explosive mixture, as of potassium nitrate, sulfur, and charcoal, used in shells and cartridges, in fireworks, for blasting, etc.
  • gwendolyn — a female given name: from a Welsh word meaning “white.”.
  • handtowel — a small piece of thick soft cloth used to dry the hands
  • handwoven — made on a handloom; handloomed.
  • handwrote — to write (something) by hand.
  • honeydews — Plural form of honeydew.
  • hose down — spray sth clean
  • inglewood — a city in SW California, near Los Angeles.
  • jointweed — a plant of the buckwheat family, with jointed stems and clustered white or pink flowers
  • keep down — to hold or retain in one's possession; hold as one's own: If you like it, keep it. Keep the change.
  • knotweeds — Plural form of knotweed.
  • knowledge — acquaintance with facts, truths, or principles, as from study or investigation; general erudition: knowledge of many things.
  • lancewood — the tough, elastic wood of any of various trees, especially Oxandra lanceolata, of tropical America, used for carriage shafts, cabinetwork, etc.
  • landowner — an owner or proprietor of land.
  • lansdowne — Henry Charles Keith Petty-Fitzmaurice [pet-ee-fits-mawr-is,, -mor-] /ˈpɛt i fɪtsˈmɔr ɪs,, -ˈmɒr-/ (Show IPA), 5th Marquis of, 1845–1927, British statesman: viceroy of India 1888–94, foreign secretary 1900–05.
  • lemonwood — a tropical American tree, Calycophyllum candidissimum, of the madder family, having flowers with conspicuous white calyx lobes.
  • live down — to have life, as an organism; be alive; be capable of vital functions: all things that live.
  • lowlander — a native of the Lowlands.
  • melt down — substance
  • meltdowns — Plural form of meltdown.
  • move down — If someone or something moves down, they go to a lower level, grade, or class.
  • neckdowns — Plural form of neckdown.
  • networked — any netlike combination of filaments, lines, veins, passages, or the like: a network of arteries; a network of sewers under the city.
  • new blood — If people talk about bringing new blood into an organization or sports team, they are referring to new people who are likely to improve the organization or team.
  • new order — a new or revised system of operation, form of government, plan of attack, or the like.
  • new world — Western Hemisphere (def 1).
  • new-found — newly found or discovered: newfound friends.
  • newground — a tract of land recently cleared for cultivation.
  • newsboard — bulletin board.
  • newshound — A newspaper reporter.
  • no wonder — it is not surprising
  • nonwinged — without wings; not winged
  • note down — write for reference
  • oceanward — Toward the ocean.
  • over-wind — to wind beyond the proper limit; wind too far: He must have overwound his watch.
  • overdrawn — Past participle of overdraw.
  • overdrown — (obsolete, transitive) To wet or drench to excess.
  • overwound — to wind beyond the proper limit; wind too far: He must have overwound his watch.
  • pastedown — the leaf of an endpaper that is pasted to the inside of the front or back cover of a book.
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