9-letter words containing w, a, g, e
- greenwash — Disinformation disseminated by an organization so as to present an environmentally responsible public image.
- greenways — Plural form of greenway.
- grey-wave — denoting a company or an investment that is potentially profitable but is unlikely to fulfil expectations before the investor has grey hair
- greywacke — Geology. a dark-gray coarse-grained wacke.
- greywater — Alternative spelling of gray water.
- groupware — software that allows users on a network to work together and communicate effectively: Our company uses groupware to share files, databases, calendars, and email.
- grunewald — Mathias [mah-tee-ahs] /mɑˈti ɑs/ (Show IPA), (Mathias Neithardt-Gothardt) c1470–1528, German painter and architect.
- guideways — Plural form of guideway.
- guiltware — /gilt'weir/ 1. A piece of freeware decorated with a message telling one how long and hard the author worked on it and intimating that one is a no-good freeloader if one does not immediately send the poor suffering martyr gobs of money. 2. Shareware that works.
- hemingway — Ernest (Miller) 1899–1961, U.S. novelist, short-story writer, and journalist: Nobel Prize 1954.
- hogwaller — Alternative spelling of hog waller.
- inweaving — Present participle of inweave.
- lacewings — Plural form of lacewing.
- lag screw — type of threaded bolt
- lag-screw — to fasten with a lag screw.
- langwidge — Eye dialect of language.
- law agent — (in Scotland) a solicitor holding a certificate from the Law Society of Scotland and thereby entitled to appear for a client in any Sheriff Court
- lawgivers — Plural form of lawgiver.
- lawmonger — an inferior lawyer
- lawyering — a person whose profession is to represent clients in a court of law or to advise or act for clients in other legal matters.
- legwarmer — a footless, stockinglike knitted covering for the leg, usually worn over tights, trousers, boots, etc., for warmth, as in a dance class or while exercising, or as a fashion accessory.
- lightwave — A wave of light.
- long wave — Electricity. an electromagnetic wave over 60 meters in length.
- low-grade — of an inferior quality, worth, value, etc.: The mine yields low-grade silver ore.
- mag wheel — a wheel containing magnesium or aluminum generally alloyed with steel, which makes it lighter in weight and shinier than an ordinary steel wheel: used especially on racing cars and sports cars.
- megawatts — Plural form of megawatt.
- newchwang — Niuzhuang.
- newfangle — (obsolete) Eager for novelties; desirous of changing.
- newgrange — the largest of three mound-covered passage graves on the river Boyne in county Meath, Ireland, built c3000 b.c., having a corbeled roof and hammered geometric engravings and containing traces of cremation burials.
- newsagent — newsdealer.
- nightwear — night clothes.
- norwegian — of or relating to Norway, its inhabitants, or their language.
- overawing — Present participle of overawe.
- page view — one viewing of a web page; a single visit: Tracking pageviews is a way of predicting the advertising potential of a website.
- powfagged — exhausted
- rewarding — affording satisfaction, valuable experience, or the like; worthwhile.
- sabrewing — a large hummingbird of the genus Campylopterous, with long curved wings
- sacagawea — ("Bird Woman") 1787?–1812? Shoshone guide and interpreter: accompanied Lewis and Clark expedition 1804–05.
- sewer gas — a mixture of toxic and non-toxic gases (mainly methane) produced and collected in sewers by the decomposition of waste matter such as faeces or dirty water from homes and factories
- swaggered — to walk or strut with a defiant or insolent air.
- swingbeat — a type of modern dance music that combines soul, rhythm and blues, and hip-hop
- take wing — either of the two forelimbs of most birds and of bats, corresponding to the human arms, that are specialized for flight.
- tea wagon — a small table on wheels for carrying articles for use in serving tea.
- the wagon — Charles's Wain
- tweenager — a child of approximately eight to fourteen years of age
- unwearing — gradually impairing or wasting: Reading small print can be wearing on the eyes.
- unweaving — to undo, take apart, or separate (something woven); unravel.
- wagenboom — a South African tree
- waggeries — Plural form of waggery.
- waghalter — a person likely to be hanged