7-letter words containing w, e, d
- eu-wide — (of a policy, etc) applying to all the countries of the European Union
- fanweed — the pennycress, Thlaspi arvense.
- fedwire — The Fedwire is an electronic system for transferring large sums of money and securities between banks.
- foodweb — Alternative spelling of food web.
- frowned — to contract the brow, as in displeasure or deep thought; scowl.
- growled — to utter a deep guttural sound of anger or hostility: The dog growled at the mail carrier.
- gumweed — any of various New World composite plants of the genus Grindelia, having yellow flower heads and covered with a viscid secretion.
- gweduck — Alternative form of geoduck.
- gwynedd — a county in E Wales. 1493 sq. mi. (3866 sq. km).
- handsew — to sew by hand.
- headsaw — a saw that cuts and trims logs as they enter a mill.
- headway — headroom (def 2).
- heyward — DuBose [duh-bohz] /dəˈboʊz/ (Show IPA), 1885–1940, U.S. playwright, novelist, and poet.
- heywood — John, 1497?–1580? English dramatist and epigrammatist.
- hoedown — a community dancing party typically featuring folk and square dances accompanied by lively hillbilly tunes played on the fiddle.
- hogweed — any coarse weed with composite flower heads, especially the cow parsnip.
- howdies — a midwife.
- indwell — to inhabit.
- indwelt — to inhabit.
- jeweled — a cut and polished precious stone; gem.
- kendrew — John C(owdery) [koh-dree] /ˈkoʊ dri/ (Show IPA), 1917–97, English scientist: Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1962.
- keyword — a word that serves as a key, as to the meaning of another word, a sentence, passage, or the like.
- kotowed — Simple past tense and past participle of kotow.
- kwedien — a young African boy, esp one who has not yet undergone the rites of initiation
- leawood — a town in E Kansas.
- leeward — pertaining to, situated in, or moving toward the quarter toward which the wind blows (opposed to windward).
- letdown — a decrease in volume, force, energy, etc.: a letdown in sales; a general letdown of social barriers.
- liedown — Alternative form of lie-down.
- low-end — relatively cheap or inexpensive of its kind: We don't need an expensive car—a low-end model will do.
- lowbred — characterized by or characteristic of low or vulgar breeding; ill-bred; coarse.
- lowered — to cause to descend; let or put down: to lower a flag.
- lowndes — William Thomas, 1798–1843, English bibliographer.
- matweed — any of several grasses that are used to make mats or that grow in a densely interwoven or tangled mass, esp mat grass, Nardus stricta
- mawseed — the seed of the opium poppy, Papaver somniferum, which is used as feed for caged birds
- mayweed — a composite plant, Anthemis cotula, native to Europe and Asia but naturalized in North America, having pungent, rank-smelling foliage and flower heads with a yellow disk and white rays.
- meadows — Plural form of meadow.
- meadowy — a tract of grassland used for pasture or serving as a hayfield.
- medawar — Peter Brian, 1915–87, English zoologist and anatomist, born in Brazil: Nobel Prize in medicine 1960.
- meldrew — a person, esp a middle-aged or elderly man, who is habitually peevish, pessimistic, and cynical; curmudgeon
- miaowed — Simple past tense and past participle of miaow.
- midweek — the middle of the week.
- midwest — Middle West.
- midwife — a person trained to assist women in childbirth.
- midwive — Obsolete form of midwife.
- mildews — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of mildew.
- mildewy — Affected by mildew; moldy.
- miswend — to go astray or go badly
- new lad — a cultural stereotype, which is basically a throwback to a supposedly more masculine or macho image of masculinity in reaction against the supposedly feminized 'New Man' of the 1990s
- newbold — a male given name.
- newmade — Newly made.