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8-letter words containing w, e, r, c, o

  • -crowned — crowned as specified
  • becoward — to make cowardly, to make into a coward
  • bowgrace — a fender or pad used to protect the bows of a vessel from ice.
  • cagework — openwork resembling the bars of a cage
  • camwhore — a person who performs sexual or titillating acts in front of a webcam for the gratification of online customers who reward him or her with money or gifts
  • canework — strips of cane that are interlaced and used in cane chairs or the like.
  • capework — the use of the cape by the matador
  • careworn — A person who looks careworn looks worried, tired, and unhappy.
  • casework — Casework is social work that involves actually dealing or working with the people who need help.
  • caseworm — any of various insect larvae that build protective cases about their bodies
  • cawnpore — former name of Kanpur.
  • checkrow — a row of plants, esp corn, in which the spaces between adjacent plants are equal to those between adjacent rows to facilitate cultivation
  • chowders — Plural form of chowder.
  • clownery — clownish behavior.
  • co-owner — a person who is one of the joint owners of something
  • co-wrote — to coauthor.
  • codeword — (esp in military use) a word used to identify a classified plan, operation, etc
  • colewort — cole
  • cookware — Cookware is the range of pans and pots which are used in cooking.
  • core war — (games)   (Or more recently, "Core Wars") A game played between assembly code programs running in the core of a simulated machine (and vicariously by their authors). The objective is to kill your opponents' programs by overwriting them. The programs are written using an instruction set called "Redcode" and run on a virtual machine called "MARS" (Memory Array Redcode Simulator). Core War was devised by Victor Vyssotsky, Robert Morris Sr., and Dennis Ritchie in the early 1960s (their original game was called "Darwin" and ran on a PDP-1 at Bell Labs). It was first described in the "Core War Guidelines" of March, 1984 by D. G. Jones and A. K. Dewdney of the Department of Computer Science at The University of Western Ontario (Canada). Dewdney wrote several "Computer Recreations" articles in "Scientific American" which discussed Core War, starting with the May 1984 article. Those articles are contained in the two anthologies cited below. A.K. Dewdney's articles are still the most readable introduction to Core War, even though the Redcode dialect described in there is no longer current. The International Core War Society (ICWS) creates and maintains Core War standards and the runs Core War tournaments. There have been six annual tournaments and two standards (ICWS'86 and ICWS'88).
  • cornwell — Patricia D(aniels). born 1956, US crime novelist; her novels, many of which feature the pathologist Dr Kay Scarpetta, include Postmortem (1990), The Last Precinct (2000), and Isle of Dogs (2002)
  • cowalker — A phantom or astral body deemed to be separable from the physical body and capable of acting independently; a doppelganger.
  • cowberry — a creeping ericaceous evergreen shrub, Vaccinium vitis-idaea, of N temperate and arctic regions, with pink or red flowers and edible slightly acid berries
  • cowering — to crouch, as in fear or shame.
  • cowherds — Plural form of cowherd.
  • cowinner — one of a number of winners
  • coworker — Your coworkers are the people you work with, especially people on the same job or project as you.
  • cowriter — a writer who works in collaboration with another writer
  • cromwell — Oliver. 1599–1658, English general and statesman. A convinced Puritan, he was an effective leader of the parliamentary army in the Civil War. After the execution of Charles I he quelled the Royalists in Scotland and Ireland, and became Lord Protector of the Commonwealth (1653–58)
  • crowners — Plural form of crowner.
  • crownets — Plural form of crownet.
  • crownlet — a small crown
  • crowstep — corbiestep.
  • eat crow — any of several large oscine birds of the genus Corvus, of the family Corvidae, having a long, stout bill, lustrous black plumage, and a wedge-shaped tail, as the common C. brachyrhynchos, of North America.
  • escrowed — Simple past tense and past participle of escrow.
  • facework — The material of the outside or front side, as of a wall or building.
  • fencerow — the uncultivated land on each side of and below a fence.
  • forcetwo — An unofficial successor to ForceOne by Andrew K. Wright.
  • lacework — lace (def 1).
  • 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.
  • overcrow — to crow over
  • owrecome — the chorus of a song
  • rockweed — a fucoid seaweed growing on rocks exposed at low tide.
  • rockwellNorman, 1894–1978, U.S. illustrator.
  • screw-on — attached, connected, or closed by screwing onto another part of a container or receptacle.
  • supercow — a dairy cow that produces a very high milk yield as a result of selective breeding or genetic modification
  • the crow — the constellation Corvus
  • welcomer — a kindly greeting or reception, as to one whose arrival gives pleasure: to give someone a warm welcome.
  • wordtech — (company)   Manufacturers of Quicksilver. Address: Orinda, CA, USA.

On this page, we collect all 8-letter words with W-E-R-C-O. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 8-letter word that contains in W-E-R-C-O to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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