0%

7-letter words containing s, w, e

  • respawn — (of a character or item in a video game) to reenter an existing game environment at a fixed point after having been defeated or otherwise removed from play: If another player character has already opened the treasure chest, you will have to wait a few minutes for the chest to respawn.
  • resworn — to make a solemn declaration or affirmation by some sacred being or object, as a deity or the Bible.
  • retwist — to twist again
  • rewards — the benefits of doing something
  • roswell — a city in SE New Mexico.
  • rzeszow — a city in SE Poland.
  • salween — a river in SE Asia, flowing S from SW China through E Burma (Myanmar) to the Bay of Bengal. 1750 miles (2815 km) long.
  • saw set — an instrument used to bend out slightly the point of each alternate tooth of a saw so that the kerf made by the saw will be wider than its blade.
  • schweiz — German name of Switzerland.
  • scowled — to draw down or contract the brows in a sullen, displeased, or angry manner.
  • scowler — to draw down or contract the brows in a sullen, displeased, or angry manner.
  • scowrer — a hooligan
  • screwed — fastened with screws.
  • screwup — a mistake or blunder: The package was delayed through an addressing screwup.
  • sea cow — any sirenian, as the manatee or dugong.
  • sea mew — sea gull
  • seafowl — seabird.
  • seahawk — a twin-engine, four-seat U.S. Navy helicopter used for surveillance, targeting, and antisubmarine warfare.
  • sealwax — a sealing wax made from a preparation of shellac and turpentine that is soft and fluid when heated, but which hardens upon cooling
  • seawall — groyne: wave barrier
  • seawant — the Native American name for silver coins and, formerly, the shell beads used as currency
  • seaward — Also, seawards. toward the sea: a storm moving seaward.
  • seaware — seaweed, especially coarse, large seaweed, used chiefly as a fertilizer.
  • seaweed — any plant or plants growing in the ocean.
  • seawife — a variety of sea fish which is tropical, brightly coloured and has spiny fins
  • seaworm — a marine worm
  • see-saw — a recreation in which two children alternately ride up and down while seated at opposite ends of a plank balanced at the middle.
  • seewing — prosecution
  • semiraw — (of food) not fully cooked; (of materials) not fully processed; raw to some degree
  • senwood — the light-colored wood of a Japanese tree, Kalopanax pictus (or K. ricinifolium), used for veneer in the manufacture of plywood.
  • sewable — capable of being fastened or enclosed by stitches
  • sewered — an artificial conduit, usually underground, for carrying off waste water and refuse, as in a town or city.
  • sexwale — Tokyo. full name Mosima Gabriel Sexwale. born 1953; South African political activist and businessman
  • shawlie — a working-class woman, esp one who wears a shawl
  • shawnee — a member of an Algonquian-speaking tribe formerly in the east-central U.S., now in Oklahoma.
  • shedrow — (at a racetrack) a row or double row of horse barns with individual stalls facing a walkway.
  • show-me — demanding proof or evidence before being convinced: a show-me attitude toward new ideas.
  • showery — characterized by or abounding with showers: the showery season in the tropics.
  • sideway — a byway.
  • sinewed — a tendon.
  • sitwellDame Edith, 1887–1964, English poet and critic.
  • skewgee — crooked or slanted; cockeyed.
  • skewing — an oblique movement, direction, or position.
  • skiwear — activewear designed to be worn for skiing, as jackets, sweaters, and pants.
  • slowest — moving or proceeding with little or less than usual speed or velocity: a slow train.
  • sobukwe — Robert (Mangaliso). 1924–78, South African politician. Founder of the Pan-Africanist Congress
  • somehow — in some way not specified, apparent, or known.
  • someway — in some way; somehow.
  • somewhy — for some reason
  • spyware — Computers. software that is installed surreptitiously and gathers information about an Internet user's browsing habits, intercepts the user's personal data, etc., transmitting this information to a third party: a parent's use of spyware to monitor a child's online activities.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?