9-letter words containing w, e, r, n, t
- snow tire — an automobile tire with a deep tread or protruding studs to give increased traction on snow or ice.
- snow tyre — a motor vehicle tyre with deep treads and ridges to give improved grip on snow and ice
- snow-tire — an automobile tire with a deep tread or protruding studs to give increased traction on snow or ice.
- sternward — toward the stern; astern.
- stoneware — a hard, opaque, vitrified ceramic ware.
- stonework — any construction, as walls or the like, of stone; stone masonry.
- stonewort — any of a plantlike group of green algae constituting the class Charophyceae, having a jointed body frequently encrusted with lime and usually attached to the bottom in fresh water.
- strewment — something strewed or intended for strewing, as flowers.
- sweetcorn — Sweetcorn is a long rounded vegetable covered in small yellow seeds. It is part of the maize plant. The seeds themselves can also be referred to as sweetcorn.
- sweetener — something that sweetens, as sugar or a low-calorie synthetic product used instead of sugar.
- swingtree — a whiffletree.
- tear down — to pull apart or in pieces by force, especially so as to leave ragged or irregular edges. Synonyms: rend, rip, rive. Antonyms: mend, repair, sew.
- time-worn — worn or impaired by time.
- tirewoman — a lady's maid.
- tree lawn — a strip of grass-covered ground between sidewalk and curb, often planted with shade trees.
- treenware — household utensils, dishes, etc., made entirely of wood.
- trelawney — Edward John, 1792–1881, English adventurer and author.
- tweenager — a child of approximately eight to fourteen years of age
- twinberry — the partridgeberry, Mitchella repens.
- underwent — simple past tense of undergo.
- unwreathe — to bring out of a wreathed condition; untwist; untwine.
- unwritten — not actually formulated or expressed; customary; traditional.
- waitering — a person, especially a man, who waits on tables, as in a restaurant.
- warbonnet — Alternative spelling of war bonnet.
- warm tone — a yellow, brown, olive, or reddish tinge in a black-and-white print.
- warranted — authorization, sanction, or justification.
- warrantee — a person to whom a warranty is made.
- warranter — One who warrants, gives authority, or legally empowers.
- water gun — water pistol.
- water hen — moorhen (def 1).
- waterings — Plural form of watering.
- waterline — Nautical. the part of the outside of a ship's hull that is just at the water level.
- watermint — Alternative spelling of water mint.
- waterskin — The skin of a goat used as a container for water.
- watertown — a town in E Massachusetts, on the Charles River, near Boston: U.S. arsenal.
- waterworn — worn by the action of water; smoothed by the force or movement of water.
- watterson — Henry ("Marse Henry") 1840–1921, U.S. journalist and political leader.
- wavefront — a surface, real or imaginary, that is the locus of all adjacent points at which the phase of oscillation is the same.
- wear thin — to carry or have on the body or about the person as a covering, equipment, ornament, or the like: to wear a coat; to wear a saber; to wear a disguise.
- weltering — to roll, toss, or heave, as waves or the sea.
- wentworth — Thomas, 1st Earl of Strafford, Strafford, 1st Earl of.
- wernerite — a variety of scapolite.
- westering — moving or shifting toward the west: the westering sun; a westering wind.
- westerner — a native or inhabitant of the West, especially of the western U.S.
- westernly — (obsolete) In or towards the west. (16th-19th c.).
- wet nurse — woman hired to breast-feeds another's child
- wet-nurse — to act as a wet nurse to (an infant).
- wethering — Present participle of wether.
- whereinto — Into which.
- whereunto — (archaic or formal, interrogative) unto what; to what purpose.