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7-letter words containing r, w, d

  • steward — a person who manages another's property or financial affairs; one who administers anything as the agent of another or others.
  • sunward — Also, sunwards. toward the sun.
  • swedger — a sweet
  • sworder — a swordsman
  • tarweed — any of several resinous or gummy, composite plants of the genus Grindelia, having solitary flower heads.
  • thrawed — British Dialect. to throw.
  • throwed — a simple past tense and past participle of throw.
  • towards — in the direction of: to walk toward the river.
  • towered — any structure, contrivance, or object that resembles or suggests a tower.
  • undrawn — to draw open or aside: to undraw a curtain.
  • unwired — not wired, especially not connected by power lines, cables, or wires to receive electricity or cable television.
  • upwards — toward a higher place or position: The birds flew upward.
  • vanward — in or towards the front
  • waddler — One who waddles.
  • wafered — Simple past tense and past participle of wafer.
  • wagered — something risked or staked on an uncertain event; bet: to place a wager on a soccer match.
  • wanders — Plural form of wander.
  • warbird — a vintage military aeroplane
  • warbled — Past participle of warble.
  • wardens — Plural form of warden.
  • warders — Plural form of warder.
  • warding — a division or district of a city or town, as for administrative or political purposes.
  • warhead — the forward section of a self-propelled missile, bomb, torpedo, or the like, containing the explosive, chemical, or atomic charge.
  • warlord — a military leader, especially of a warlike nation.
  • watered — of or relating to water in any way: a water journey.
  • watford — a city in Hertfordshire, SE England, N of London.
  • wavered — Simple past tense and past participle of waver.
  • wayward — turned or turning away from what is right or proper; willful; disobedient: a wayward son; wayward behavior.
  • wearied — physically or mentally exhausted by hard work, exertion, strain, etc.; fatigued; tired: weary eyes; a weary brain.
  • weedery — a weed-ridden area; a collection of weeds
  • weirder — involving or suggesting the supernatural; unearthly or uncanny: a weird sound; weird lights.
  • weirdie — (informal) Someone or something weird.
  • weirdly — involving or suggesting the supernatural; unearthly or uncanny: a weird sound; weird lights.
  • weirdos — Plural form of weirdo.
  • welders — Plural form of welder.
  • weredog — (fiction) A shapeshifter who can change between dog and human form.
  • wergeld — (in Anglo-Saxon England and other Germanic countries)
  • wergild — (in Anglo-Saxon England and other Germanic countries)
  • wexford — a county in Leinster province, in the SE Republic of Ireland. 908 sq. mi. (2350 sq. km).
  • wh-word — an interrogative or relative word that usually, but not always, begins with wh-, as what, why, where, which, who, or how.
  • whidder — to move with force
  • whirled — Simple past tense and past participle of whirl.
  • whirred — to go, fly, revolve, or otherwise move quickly with a humming or buzzing sound: An electric fan whirred softly in the corner.
  • whorled — having a whorl or whorls.
  • widener — Any device used to widen something; especially a drill designed to produce a hole greater than its own diameter.
  • widower — a man who has lost his spouse by death and has not remarried.
  • wielder — to exercise (power, authority, influence, etc.), as in ruling or dominating.
  • wilfred — a male given name: from Old English words meaning “will” and “peace.”.
  • wilfrid — a male given name: from Old English words meaning “will” and “peace.”.
  • willard — Emma (Hart) 1787–1870, U.S. educator and poet.
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