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8-letter words containing w, e, m

  • new-mown — recently mown or cut: the refreshing smell of new-mown hay.
  • newcombe — John (David). born 1944, Australian tennis player; winner of seven Grand Slam singles titles (1967–75), including three at Wimbledon (1967, 1970, 1971)
  • newcomenThomas, 1663–1729, English inventor.
  • newcomer — a person or thing that has recently arrived; new arrival: She is a newcomer to our city. The firm is a newcomer in the field of advertising.
  • newsroom — a room in the offices of a newspaper, news service, or broadcasting organization in which the news is processed.
  • nimwegen — German name of Nijmegen.
  • nymwegen — Nijmegen.
  • oswiecim — Polish name of Auschwitz.
  • overswim — to swim across
  • overwarm — to make too warm
  • owrecome — the chorus of a song
  • penwoman — a female writer
  • pomwater — a kind of sharp-tasting apple
  • raw mode — (operating system)   A mode that allows a program to transfer bits directly to or from an I/O device without any processing, abstraction, or interpretation by the operating system. Systems that make this distinction for a disk file are generally regarded as broken. Compare rare mode, cooked mode.
  • red worm — North Central, South Midland, and Southern U.S. an earthworm.
  • romeward — to or toward Rome or the Roman Catholic Church.
  • rumbelow — a nonsense word used in the refrain of certain sea shanties
  • seawoman — a woman sailor or a woman who works on a ship or in the navy
  • semiwild — not fully domesticated; partially tamed or cultivated; having some characteristics of the wild
  • semiwild — not fully domesticated; partially tamed or cultivated; having some characteristics of the wild
  • showtime — the time at which an entertainment is scheduled to begin.
  • snowdome — a leisure centre with facilities for skiing, skating, etc
  • snowmelt — water from snow that is melting or has melted.
  • soembawa — Dutch name of Sumbawa.
  • somewhat — in some measure or degree; to some extent: not angry, just somewhat disturbed.
  • somewhen — sometime.
  • somewise — by some means; somehow.
  • stemware — glass or crystal vessels, especially for beverages and desserts, having rounded bowls mounted on footed stems.
  • sumpweed — a herbaceous, oily, annual plant, Iva annua, native to North America and once cultivated for its edible seeds
  • swamphen — any of several large Old World gallinules varying from purple to white, all possibly belonging to the single species Porphyrio porphyrio.
  • sweetman — (in the Caribbean) a man kept by a woman
  • swelldom — fashionable society
  • swimmers — to move in water by movements of the limbs, fins, tail, etc.
  • swimwear — clothing designed to be worn for swimming or at a beach.
  • tapeworm — any of various flat or tapelike worms of the class Cestoidea, lacking an alimentary canal, and parasitic when adult in the alimentary canal of humans and other vertebrates: the larval and adult stages are usually in different hosts.
  • teamwise — in respect of a team, in the manner of a team
  • teamwork — cooperative or coordinated effort on the part of a group of persons acting together as a team or in the interests of a common cause.
  • termwise — term by term: The series can be integrated termwise. Two series are added termwise.
  • time was — there was a time
  • timework — work done and paid for by the hour or day.
  • timeworn — worn or impaired by time.
  • towerman — Railroads. a person who works in a switch tower and, by means of a signal box, directs the movement of trains.
  • townhome — town house (def 3).
  • trewsman — a Highlander
  • tubeworm — any of various marine worms that produce and inhabit a tube, some being adapted to a hydrothermal vent environment.
  • twelvemo — duodecimo
  • twentymo — a book size of about 3 × 5 inches (8 × 12 cm), determined by printing on sheets folded to form 20 leaves or 40 pages.
  • twigsome — covered with twigs
  • two-name — (of commercial paper) having more than one obligor, usually a maker and endorser, both of whom are fully liable.
  • two-time — to be unfaithful to (a lover or spouse).
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