0%

8-letter words containing w, e, n, o

  • nowhence — from no place; from nowhere
  • nowheres — in or at no place; not anywhere: The missing pen was nowhere to be found.
  • nyetwork — notwork
  • obwalden — one of the two divisions of the canton of Unterwalden, in central Switzerland. 189 sq. mi. (490 sq. km). Capital: Sarnen.
  • one-down — having conceded an advantage or lead to someone or something
  • open-jaw — relating to a ticket that allows a traveller to arrive in one place and depart from another
  • open-web — having a web of zigzag or crisscross lacing.
  • openwork — any kind of work, especially ornamental, as of embroidery, lace, metal, stone, or wood, having a latticelike nature or showing openings through its substance.
  • ovenware — heat-resistant dishes of glass, pottery, etc., for baking and serving food; bakeware.
  • ovenwood — brushwood; deadwood fit only for burning.
  • overween — to be conceited or arrogant.
  • overwind — to wind beyond the proper limit; wind too far: He must have overwound his watch.
  • overwing — to fly above
  • overworn — past participle of overwear.
  • owen gun — a type of simple recoil-operated 9 mm sub-machine-gun first used by Australian forces in World War II
  • peg down — to make (a person) committed to a course of action or bound to follow rules
  • penwoman — a female writer
  • pinewood — the wood of a pine.
  • pondweed — any aquatic plant of the genus Potamogeton, most species of which grow in ponds and quiet streams.
  • pop wine — an inexpensive wine having a low alcohol content and artificial fruit flavoring.
  • powering — ability to do or act; capability of doing or accomplishing something.
  • preowned — previously owned; used; secondhand: a sale of preowned furs.
  • rawboned — having little flesh, especially on a large-boned frame; gaunt.
  • re-endow — to endow again
  • red snow — snow that has acquired a red color either from airborne particles of red dust or from a type of alga that contains a red pigment.
  • renowned — celebrated; famous.
  • renowner — a renown giver; someone who makes another person famous or renowned
  • roweling — a small wheel with radiating points, forming the extremity of a spur.
  • sawbones — a surgeon or physician.
  • screw-on — attached, connected, or closed by screwing onto another part of a container or receptacle.
  • seawoman — a woman sailor or a woman who works on a ship or in the navy
  • set down — to put (something or someone) in a particular place: to set a vase on a table.
  • slowness — moving or proceeding with little or less than usual speed or velocity: a slow train.
  • snow ice — opaque ice formed from partly melted snow or ice; frozen slush.
  • snow pea — a variety of the common pea, Pisum sativum macrocarpon, having thin, flat, edible pods that are used in cookery.
  • snowbell — a small tree belonging to the genus Styrax, of the storax family, having simple, alternate leaves and showy white bell-shaped flowers.
  • snowbelt — a region of annual or heavy snowfall.
  • snowdome — a leisure centre with facilities for skiing, skating, etc
  • snowline — limit of permanent snow
  • snowmelt — water from snow that is melting or has melted.
  • snowshed — a structure, as over an extent of railroad track on a mountainside, for protection against snow.
  • snowshoe — a contrivance that may be attached to the foot to enable the wearer to walk on deep snow without sinking, especially a light, racket-shaped frame across which is stretched a network of rawhide.
  • somewhen — sometime.
  • stewpond — a fishpond, often located in the garden of a monastery
  • sweet on — fond of or infatuated with
  • swinepox — a variety of chicken pox.
  • swounded — swoon.
  • takedown — made or constructed so as to be easily dismantled or disassembled.
  • tea gown — a semiformal gown of fine material, especially one styled with soft, flowing lines, worn for afternoon social occasions.
  • teardown — a taking apart; disassembly.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?