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6-letter words containing s, w

  • crowns — Plural form of crown.
  • cushaw — a variety of crookneck squash (Cucurbita moschata) similar to the pumpkin
  • dawson — a town in NW Canada, in the Yukon on the Yukon River: a boom town during the Klondike gold rush (at its height in 1899). Pop: 1251 (2001)
  • deskew — (transitive, computing) To rotate a scanned image to compensate for skewing.
  • disown — to refuse to acknowledge as belonging or pertaining to oneself; deny the ownership of or responsibility for; repudiate; renounce: to disown one's heirs; to disown a published statement.
  • dowels — Plural form of dowel.
  • dowers — Plural form of dower.
  • dowlas — a coarse linen or cotton cloth.
  • dowsed — Simple past tense and past participle of dowse.
  • dowser — Also called dowsing rod [dou-zing] /ˈdaʊ zɪŋ/ (Show IPA). divining rod.
  • dowses — Plural form of dowse.
  • dowset — Obsolete form of doucet.
  • dowson — Ernest (Christopher) 1867–1900, English poet.
  • drawls — an act or utterance of a person who drawls.
  • drowns — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of drown.
  • drowse — to be sleepy or half-asleep.
  • drowsy — half-asleep; sleepy.
  • dwarfs — Plural form of dwarf.
  • dweebs — Plural form of dweeb.
  • dwells — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dwell.
  • ecowas — Economic Community of West African States.
  • elbows — Plural form of elbow.
  • endows — Plural form of endow.
  • eschew — Deliberately avoid using; abstain from.
  • escrow — A bond, deed, or other document kept in the custody of a third party, taking effect only when a specified condition has been fulfilled.
  • fatwas — Plural form of fatwa.
  • fawkesGuy, 1570–1606, English conspirator and leader in the Gunpowder plot of 1605: Guy Fawkes Day is observed on November 5 by the building of effigies and bonfires.
  • fewest — not many but more than one: Few artists live luxuriously.
  • flawns — Plural form of flawn.
  • fowers — Plural form of fower.
  • fowles — John (Martin). 1926–2005, British novelist. His books include The Collector (1963), The Magus (1966), The French Lieutenant's Woman (1969), and The Tree (1991)
  • frowns — Plural form of frown.
  • frowst — A warm, stuffy atmosphere in a room.
  • frowsy — frowzy.
  • gawpus — a clumsy or silly person
  • gowans — Plural form of gowan.
  • growls — Plural form of growl.
  • growse — (UK, dialect, obsolete) To shiver; to have chills.
  • hawkesJohn, 1925–1998, U.S. novelist and short-story writer.
  • hawser — a heavy rope for mooring or towing.
  • hewers — Plural form of hewer.
  • hewishAntony, born 1924, British astronomer: discovered pulsars; Nobel Prize in Physics 1974.
  • how so — in what way or manner; by what means?: How did the accident happen?
  • indows — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of indow.
  • inlaws — Plural form of inlaw.
  • jawans — Plural form of jawan.
  • jewels — a female given name.
  • jewess — a term used to refer to a Jewish girl or woman.
  • jewish — of, relating to, or characteristic of the Jews or Judaism: Jewish customs.
  • jigsaw — Also, jig saw. an electric machine saw with a narrow blade mounted vertically in a frame, for cutting curves or other difficult lines or patterns.
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