7-letter words containing t, o, w
- go west — a cardinal point of the compass, 90° to the left when facing north, corresponding to the point where the sun is seen to set. Abbreviation: W.
- go with — to move or proceed, especially to or from something: They're going by bus.
- godwits — Plural form of godwit.
- growths — Plural form of growth.
- growthy — growing rapidly
- haworth — Sir Walter Norman, 1883–1950, English chemist: Nobel Prize 1937.
- hot war — open military conflict; an armed conflict between nations: The increasing tension in the Middle East could lead to a hot war.
- hotwash — Discussions and evaluations of an agency's (or multiple agencies') performance following an exercise, training session, or major event.
- hotwife — (slang) A married female swinger; a wife who has sex with men other than her husband, with the husband's approval.
- hotwire — Alternative spelling of hot-wire.
- howbeit — Archaic. nevertheless.
- knowbot — A program on a network (especially the Internet) that operates independently and has reasoning and decision-making capabilities.
- knowest — (archaic) second-person singular form of 'know'.
- knoweth — Archaic third-person singular form of know.
- kotowed — Simple past tense and past participle of kotow.
- kotwali — a police station.
- kotwals — Plural form of kotwal.
- kowtows — Plural form of kowtow.
- letdown — a decrease in volume, force, energy, etc.: a letdown in sales; a general letdown of social barriers.
- low-cut — Low-cut dresses and blouses do not cover the top part of a woman's chest.
- low-fat — of or being a food or style of cooking that contains or uses very little butter, oil, or other fat, usually three grams of fat or less per serving.
- low-tar — (of cigarettes or tobacco) containing less tar than usual or standard.
- madwort — a mat-forming plant, Aurinia saxatilis (or Alyssum saxatille), of the mustard family, having spatulate leaves and open clusters of pale yellow flowers.
- midtown — the middle part of a city or town between uptown and downtown.
- mistbow — fogbow.
- mudwort — a plant of the genus Limosella found growing in muddy areas near water
- mugwort — any of certain weedy composite plants of the genus Artemisia, especially A. vulgaris, having aromatic leaves and small, greenish flower heads.
- network — any netlike combination of filaments, lines, veins, passages, or the like: a network of arteries; a network of sewers under the city.
- newbolt — Sir Henry John, 1862–1938, English poet, novelist, naval historian, and critic.
- newport — a seaport in Gwent, in SE Wales, near the Severn estuary.
- newtons — Plural form of newton.
- newtown — a town in SW Connecticut.
- notwork — (networking, humour) /not'werk/ A network that is performing badly. Said at IBM to have originally referred to a particular period of flakiness on IBM's VNET corporate network ca. 1988; but there are independent reports of the term from elsewhere. The joke sounds better in Russian, where "nyet" means "no", hence nyetwork /nyet'werk/.
- nowcast — (meteorology) A weather forecast predicting the weather for a very short upcoming period, usually of a few hours.
- nutwood — any of various nutbearing trees, as the hickory or walnut.
- oldtown — The historic district of a city or town.
- one-two — Also called one-two punch. Boxing. a left-hand jab immediately followed by a right cross.
- or what — In conversation, you say or what? after a question as a way of stating an opinion forcefully and showing that you expect other people to agree.
- ostwald — Wilhelm [vil-helm] /ˈvɪl hɛlm/ (Show IPA), 1853–1932, German chemist: Nobel prize 1909.
- ottumwa — a city in SE Iowa, on the Des Moines River.
- outbawl — to bawl more than or louder than
- outcrow — to exceed in crowing or to crow louder than
- outdraw — to draw a gun, revolver, etc., from a holster, faster than (an opponent or competitor): She could outdraw any member of the club.
- outdrew — to draw a gun, revolver, etc., from a holster, faster than (an opponent or competitor): She could outdraw any member of the club.
- outfawn — (rare) To exceed in fawning.
- outflow — the act of flowing out: We need flood control to stem the river's outflow.
- outglow — (transitive) To glow brighter than.
- outgnaw — to exceed in gnawing
- outgrew — to grow too large for: to outgrow one's clothes.
- outgrow — to grow too large for: to outgrow one's clothes.