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8-letter words containing s, e, w, d

  • frowsted — Simple past tense and past participle of frowst.
  • handsewn — sewn by hand.
  • hoedowns — Plural form of hoedown.
  • indwells — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of indwell.
  • jigsawed — Simple past tense and past participle of jigsaw.
  • keywords — a word that serves as a key, as to the meaning of another word, a sentence, passage, or the like.
  • leewards — towards the lee side
  • letdowns — Plural form of letdown.
  • lewdness — inclined to, characterized by, or inciting to lust or lechery; lascivious.
  • lewdster — a lewd person
  • mayweeds — Plural form of mayweed.
  • midwives — Plural form of midwife.
  • miswired — Wired incorrectly.
  • newlands — John Alexander. 1838–98, British chemist: classified the elements in order of their atomic weight, noticing similarities in every eighth and thus discovering his law of octaves
  • newsdesk — the department of a newspaper, television, etc., that writes, edits, or releases news, especially late-breaking news or important bulletins.
  • newsfeed — (Internet) A feed, especially one providing news content.
  • newslady — A newswoman.
  • old west — the western region of the U.S., especially in the frontier period of the 19th century.
  • radwaste — radioactive waste.
  • red snow — snow that has acquired a red color either from airborne particles of red dust or from a type of alga that contains a red pigment.
  • rosewood — any of various reddish cabinet woods, sometimes with a roselike odor, yielded by certain tropical trees, especially belonging to the genus Dalbergia, of the legume family.
  • sandwell — a unitary authority in central England, in West Midlands. Pop: 285 000 (2003 est). Area: 86 sq km (33 sq miles)
  • saw edge — the serrated edge of a saw
  • sawblade — the blade of a saw
  • scrawled — to write or draw in a sprawling, awkward manner: He scrawled his name hastily across the blackboard.
  • seawards — Also, seawards. toward the sea: a storm moving seaward.
  • sedgwickEllery, 1872–1960, U.S. journalist and editor.
  • selfward — in the direction of or toward oneself: a selfward-moving gesture.
  • semiwild — not fully domesticated; partially tamed or cultivated; having some characteristics of the wild
  • semiwild — not fully domesticated; partially tamed or cultivated; having some characteristics of the wild
  • set down — to put (something or someone) in a particular place: to set a vase on a table.
  • shadowed — of or relating to a shadow cabinet.
  • shadower — a dark figure or image cast on the ground or some surface by a body intercepting light.
  • shadwellThomas, 1642?–92, English dramatist: poet laureate 1688–92.
  • sherwood — Robert Emmet [em-it] /ˈɛm ɪt/ (Show IPA), 1896–1955, U.S. dramatist.
  • shrewder — astute or sharp in practical matters: a shrewd politician.
  • shrewdie — a shrewd person
  • shrewdly — astute or sharp in practical matters: a shrewd politician.
  • side-way — a byway.
  • sideshow — a minor show or exhibition in connection with a principal one, as at a circus.
  • sidewalk — a walk, especially a paved one, at the side of a street or road.
  • sidewall — the part of a pneumatic tire between the edge of the tread and the rim of the wheel.
  • sideward — directed or moving toward one side.
  • sideways — with a side foremost.
  • sidewind — to move like a sidewinder.
  • sidewise — sideways
  • silkweed — any milkweed, the pods of which contain a silky down.
  • skewbald — (especially of horses) having patches of brown and white.
  • skewered — a long pin of wood or metal for inserting through meat or other food to hold or bind it in cooking.
  • slideway — an inclined surface along which something can slide.
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