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9-letter words containing t, r, e, w

  • ultrawide — extremely wide
  • underwent — simple past tense of undergo.
  • unwreathe — to bring out of a wreathed condition; untwist; untwine.
  • unwritten — not actually formulated or expressed; customary; traditional.
  • wadsetter — a person who takes out a mortgage
  • waghalter — a person likely to be hanged
  • waiterage — the discharging of waiter duties
  • waitering — a person, especially a man, who waits on tables, as in a restaurant.
  • war chest — money set aside or scheduled for a particular purpose or activity, as for a political campaign or organizational drive.
  • warbonnet — Alternative spelling of war bonnet.
  • wardmotes — Plural form of wardmote.
  • warm tone — a yellow, brown, olive, or reddish tinge in a black-and-white print.
  • warranted — authorization, sanction, or justification.
  • warrantee — a person to whom a warranty is made.
  • warranter — One who warrants, gives authority, or legally empowers.
  • wasterful — Lb obsolete wasteful.
  • wasteweir — A weir that allows the escape of excess water from a canal or reservoir.
  • water ash — hoptree.
  • water bag — a bag, sometimes made of skin, leather, etc, but in Australia usually canvas, for holding, carrying, and keeping water cool
  • water bed — a bed having a liquid-filled rubber or plastic mattress in a rigid, often heated, waterproof frame, and providing a surface that conforms to the sleeper's body in any position.
  • water boy — a person who carries a canteen or bucket of drinking water to those too occupied to fetch it, as to soldiers, laborers, or football players.
  • water bug — any of various aquatic bugs, as of the family Belostomatidae (giant water bug)
  • water cut — The water cut is the ratio of the water which is produced in a well compared to the volume of the total liquids produced.
  • water dog — a dog trained to hunt in water
  • water elm — planer tree.
  • water gap — a transverse gap in a mountain ridge, cut by and giving passage to a stream or river.
  • water gas — a toxic gaseous mixture consisting chiefly of carbon monoxide and hydrogen, prepared from steam and incandescent coke: used as an illuminant, fuel, and in organic synthesis.
  • water gum — any of several Australian trees of the myrtle family, growing near water.
  • water gun — water pistol.
  • water hen — moorhen (def 1).
  • water hog — a person who uses water selfishly or irresponsibly, esp during a water shortage
  • water ice — ice formed by direct freezing of fresh or salt water, and not by compacting of snow.
  • water key — a lever to drain saliva from a brass musical instrument, as the trombone.
  • water oak — an oak, Quercus nigra, of the southern U.S., growing chiefly along streams and swamps.
  • water pox — chickenpox.
  • water rat — any of various rodents having aquatic habits.
  • water-bus — vaporetto.
  • water-ski — to plane over water on water skis or a water ski by grasping a towing rope pulled by a speedboat.
  • waterbeds — Plural form of waterbed.
  • waterbird — A bird that frequents water, especially one that habitually wades or swims in fresh water.
  • waterbody — Any significant accumulation of water, usually covering the Earth or another planet, such as a river, lake or a bay.
  • waterbuck — any of several large African antelopes of the genus Kobus, frequenting marshes and reedy places, especially K. ellipsiprymnus, of eastern and central Africa.
  • waterbury — a city in W Connecticut.
  • waterdogs — Plural form of waterdog.
  • waterfall — a steep fall or flow of water in a watercourse from a height, as over a precipice; cascade.
  • waterford — a county in Munster province, in the S Republic of Ireland. 710 sq. mi. (1840 sq. km).
  • waterfowl — a water bird, especially a swimming bird.
  • watergate — a White House political scandal that came to light during the 1972 presidential campaign, growing out of a break-in at the Democratic Party headquarters at the Watergate apartment-office complex in Washington, D.C., and, after congressional hearings, culminating in the resignation of President Nixon in 1974.
  • waterhead — the source of a river or stream.
  • waterhole — A depression in which water collects, especially one from which animals regularly drink.
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