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9-letter words containing t, w, i, d

  • stinkwood — any of several trees yielding fetid wood.
  • storewide — applying to all the merchandise or all the departments within a store: the annual storewide clearance sale.
  • swordtail — any of several small, brightly colored, viviparous, freshwater fishes of the genus Xiphophorus, native to Central America, having the lower part of the caudal fin elongated into a swordlike structure: often kept in aquariums.
  • tail wind — a wind blowing in the same direction as the course of a ship or aircraft
  • thin down — become slimmer
  • third way — The Third Way is used to refer to a set of political beliefs and principles that is neither extremely right-wing nor extremely left-wing.
  • tidewater — water affected by the flow and ebb of the tide.
  • tidy away — When you tidy something away, you put it in something else so that it is not in the way.
  • tigerwood — a heavily striped wood used in cabinetmaking
  • tulipwood — the wood of the tulip tree.
  • twiforked — having two parts like a fork; bifurcate
  • twiformed — consisting of two parts
  • twin beds — matching single beds in a bedroom or hotel room
  • two-sided — having two sides; bilateral.
  • ultrawide — extremely wide
  • untwilled — (of fabric) not twilled
  • untwinned — born two at one birth.
  • untwisted — not twisted.
  • waistband — a band encircling the waist, especially as a part of a skirt or pair of trousers.
  • waterbird — A bird that frequents water, especially one that habitually wades or swims in fresh water.
  • waterside — the margin, bank, or shore of a river, lake, ocean, etc.
  • weird out — to cause (someone) to feel afraid or uncomfortable
  • west side — the western part of Manhattan Island, New York City: conventionally W of Fifth Avenue.
  • westfield — a city in S Massachusetts.
  • wheatbird — A bird that feeds on wheat, especially the chaffinch.
  • whitbread — Fatima. born 1961, British javelin thrower: won gold at the World Championships (1987)
  • whitedamp — a poisonous coal-mine gas composed chiefly of carbon monoxide.
  • whiteheadAlfred North, 1861–1947, English philosopher and mathematician, in the U.S. after 1924.
  • whiteside — The goldeneye.
  • whiteweed — Oxeye daisy.
  • whitewood — any of numerous trees, as the tulip tree or the linden, yielding a white or light-colored wood.
  • whithered — Simple past tense and past participle of whither.
  • whodunits — Plural form of whodunit.
  • whodunnit — a narrative dealing with a murder or a series of murders and the detection of the criminal; detective story.
  • whydunnit — a novel, film, etc, concerned with the motives of the criminal rather than his or her identity
  • wickedest — evil or morally bad in principle or practice; sinful; iniquitous: wicked people; wicked habits.
  • widthways — Widthwise The direction of the width of an object or place.
  • widthwise — in the direction of the width.
  • wild date — a feather palm, Phoenix sylvestris, of India, having drooping, bluish-green or grayish leaves and small, orange-yellow fruit.
  • wild hunt — (in northern European legend) a phantom hunt, conducted either in the sky or in forests.
  • wild oats — any uncultivated species of Avena, especially a common weedy grass, A. fatua, resembling the cultivated oat.
  • wild type — an organism having an appearance that is characteristic of the species in a natural breeding population.
  • wild west — the western frontier region of the U.S., before the establishment of stable government.
  • wildcraft — The harvesting of wild plants to sell or make into saleable products.
  • windblast — a strong, sudden gust of wind.
  • windburnt — Alternative form of windburned.
  • windchest — a chamber containing the air supply for the reeds or pipes of an organ.
  • windstorm — a storm with heavy wind but little or no precipitation.
  • windswept — open or exposed to the wind: a wind-swept beach.
  • windthrow — the uprooting of trees by wind
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