8-letter words containing s, w, e
- scrawler — a person who scrawls.
- screw up — a metal fastener having a tapered shank with a helical thread, and topped with a slotted head, driven into wood or the like by rotating, especially by means of a screwdriver.
- screw-in — fitting in by being twisted
- screw-on — attached, connected, or closed by screwing onto another part of a container or receptacle.
- screw-up — a metal fastener having a tapered shank with a helical thread, and topped with a slotted head, driven into wood or the like by rotating, especially by means of a screwdriver.
- screwage — /skroo'*j/ Like lossage but connotes that the failure is due to a designed-in misfeature rather than a simple inadequacy or a mere bug.
- sea view — view over the ocean
- sea wall — a strong wall or embankment to prevent the encroachments of the sea, serve as a breakwater, etc.
- sea wasp — any of various highly poisonous stinging jellyfishes of the order Cubomedusae, of tropical seas.
- sea whip — a gorgonian coral that forms a flexible colony resembling shrubbery on the ocean floor.
- sea wolf — any of several large, voracious, marine fishes, as the wolffish or sea bass.
- seatwork — work that can be done by a child at his or her seat in school without supervision.
- seawards — Also, seawards. toward the sea: a storm moving seaward.
- seawater — the salt water in or from the sea.
- seawoman — a woman sailor or a woman who works on a ship or in the navy
- sedgwick — Ellery, 1872–1960, U.S. journalist and editor.
- self-sow — to sow or propagate itself naturally from seeds that have been dropped.
- 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.
- setscrew — a screw passing through a threaded hole in a part to tighten the contact of that part with another, as of a collar with the shaft on which it fits.
- sewellel — mountain beaver.
- sewerage — the removal of waste water and refuse by means of sewers.
- sex show — a live performance that customers pay to watch in which people perform sexual acts
- sex work — prostitution.
- 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.
- shadwell — Thomas, 1642?–92, English dramatist: poet laureate 1688–92.
- shawnees — a member of an Algonquian-speaking tribe formerly in the east-central U.S., now in Oklahoma.
- shawties — a person of less than average stature (sometimes used as a disparaging and offensive term of address).
- she-wolf — a female wolf.
- sherwani — a long coat closed up to the neck, worn by men in India
- sherwood — Robert Emmet [em-it] /ˈɛm ɪt/ (Show IPA), 1896–1955, U.S. dramatist.
- shotwell — James Thomson, 1874–1965, U.S. diplomat, historian, and educator.
- showable — to cause or allow to be seen; exhibit; display.
- showcase — a glass case for the display and protection of articles in shops, museums, etc.
- showerer — someone who showers abundantly
- showtime — the time at which an entertainment is scheduled to begin.
- shrewder — astute or sharp in practical matters: a shrewd politician.
- shrewdie — a shrewd person
- shrewdly — astute or sharp in practical matters: a shrewd politician.
- shrewish — having the disposition of a shrew.
- 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.