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7-letter words containing r, e, w

  • browderEarl Russell, 1891–1973, U.S. Communist Party leader 1930–45.
  • browner — a dark tertiary color with a yellowish or reddish hue.
  • brownie — Brownies are small flat biscuits or cakes. They are usually chocolate flavoured and have nuts in them.
  • browser — A browser is someone who browses in a shop.
  • burweed — any of various plants that bear burs, such as the burdock
  • bywoner — a poor tenant farmer
  • cawdrey — Robert. 16th–17th-century English schoolmaster and lexicographer: compiled the first English dictionary (A Table Alphabeticall) in 1604
  • chewers — Plural form of chewer.
  • chewier — Comparative form of chewy.
  • chowder — Chowder is a thick soup containing pieces of fish.
  • clowder — a collective term for a group of cats
  • concrew — to grow together
  • coowner — Someone who owns something together with one or more other people.
  • cowdrey — (Michael) Colin, Baron. 1932–2000, English cricketer. He played for Kent and in 114 Test matches (captaining England 27 times)
  • cowered — to crouch, as in fear or shame.
  • cowherb — a European caryophyllaceous plant, Saponaria vaccaria, having clusters of pink flowers: a weed in the US
  • cowherd — a person employed to tend cattle
  • cowries — Plural form of cowrie.
  • cowrite — to write (something) in collaboration with another writer
  • cowrote — Simple past tense and past participle of cowrite.
  • cowtree — a South American moraceous tree, Brosimum galactodendron, producing latex used as a substitute for milk
  • cracowe — a boot with a long sharply pointed toe, fashionable in the 14th century
  • crawled — Simple past tense and past participle of crawl.
  • crawler — A crawler is a computer program that visits websites and collects information when you do an Internet search.
  • crawley — a town in S England, in NE West Sussex: designated a new town in 1956. Pop: 100 547 (2001)
  • crewcut — very short haircut
  • crewing — a group of persons involved in a particular kind of work or working together: the crew of a train; a wrecking crew.
  • crewman — A crewman is a member of a crew.
  • crewmen — Plural form of crewman.
  • crowded — If a place is crowded, it is full of people.
  • crowder — One who crowds or pushes.
  • crowdie — a porridge of meal and water; brose
  • crowley — a city in S Louisiana.
  • crowned — characterized by or having a crown (often used in combination): a crowned signet ring; a low-crowned fedora.
  • crowner — a promotional label consisting of a shaped printed piece of card or paper attached to a product on display
  • crownet — a coronet.
  • curfews — Plural form of curfew.
  • curlews — Plural form of curlew.
  • cutware — tools used in cutting, as knives or blades.
  • dawdler — to waste time; idle; trifle; loiter: Stop dawdling and help me with these packages!
  • daywear — clothes for everyday or informal wear
  • decrown — to divest (a person) of the role of monarch
  • depower — ability to do or act; capability of doing or accomplishing something.
  • derwent — a river in S Australia, in S Tasmania, flowing southeast to the Tasman Sea. Length: 172 km (107 miles)
  • dewater — to remove water from
  • dewdrop — a drop of dew
  • dewworm — The earthworm.
  • dowager — a woman who holds some title or property from her deceased husband, especially the widow of a king, duke, etc. (often used as an additional title to differentiate her from the wife of the present king, duke, etc.): a queen dowager; an empress dowager.
  • dowdier — Comparative form of dowdy.
  • dowered — Simple past tense and past participle of dower.
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