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9-letter words containing w, e, r, n

  • windpower — Power harnessed or generated from the wind.
  • windrowed — Simple past tense and past participle of windrow.
  • windrower — a farm implement used to mow a field and arrange the mown crop in windrows.
  • wine rack — a framework for holding a number of bottles of wine in a horizontal position
  • wineberry — a prickly shrub, Rubus phoenicolasius, of China and Japan, having pinkish or white flowers and small, red, edible fruit.
  • winemaker — an expert in the production of wines.
  • winepress — a machine in which the juice from grapes is pressed for wine.
  • wingovers — Plural form of wingover.
  • winsorize — (statistics) To transform statistics of a batch or sample by transforming extreme values.
  • winterfed — Simple past tense and past participle of winterfeed.
  • wintering — Present participle of winter.
  • winterish — Characteristic of winter.
  • winterize — to prepare (an automobile, house, etc.) for cold weather by (in automobiles) adding antifreeze and changing oil or (in houses) adding insulation, heating units, etc.
  • winterset — a drama in verse (1935) by Maxwell Anderson.
  • wire vine — a twining vine, Muehlenbeckia complexa, of the buckwheat family, native to New Zealand, having wirelike stems and circular leaves.
  • wirebound — Held together with a binding of wire.
  • wiredrawn — drawn out long and thin like a wire.
  • wiresonde — an instrument carried aloft by a captive balloon and sending temperature and humidity data over a wire cable.
  • withering — to shrivel; fade; decay: The grapes had withered on the vine.
  • witnesser — One who witnesses.
  • wittering — Present participle of witter.
  • wolverene — Alternative spelling of wolverine.
  • wolverine — Also called carcajou. a stocky, carnivorous North American mammal, Gulo luscus, of the weasel family, having blackish, shaggy hair with white markings.
  • womaniser — Non-Oxford British standard spelling of womanizer.
  • womanizer — a philanderer.
  • wonderboy — (informal) A male child prodigy, or (loosely) a talented male of any age.
  • wonderers — to think or speculate curiously: to wonder about the origin of the solar system.
  • wonderful — excellent; great; marvelous: We all had a wonderful weekend.
  • wondering — expressing admiration or amazement; marveling.
  • wonderkid — a young person whose excellence in his or her discipline is appropriate to someone older and more experienced
  • wonderous — Wondrous.
  • wonderpop — (language)   (WPOP) An implementation of POP for the PDP-10 made by Robert Rae <[email protected]> in Edinburgh in 1976. WonderPop used "cages" for different data types and introduced processes, properties and some typed identifiers.
  • wondreful — Obsolete form of wonderful.
  • wood fern — any of several shield ferns of the genus Dryopteris.
  • woomerang — boomerang.
  • wordiness — characterized by or given to the use of many, or too many, words; verbose: She grew impatient at his wordy reply.
  • workbench — a sturdy table at which an artisan works.
  • workwomen — Plural form of workwoman.
  • worldline — Alternative spelling of world line.
  • worriment — the act or an instance of worrying; anxiety.
  • worseness — the state or condition of being worse
  • worsening — Present participle of worsen.
  • wranglers — Plural form of wrangler.
  • wreathing — a circular band of flowers, foliage, or any ornamental work, for adorning the head or for any decorative purpose; a garland or chaplet.
  • wrenchers — Plural form of wrencher.
  • wrenching — to twist suddenly and forcibly; pull, jerk, or force by a violent twist: He wrenched the prisoner's wrist.
  • wrest pin — peg (def 5).
  • wrestling — an act of or a bout at wrestling.
  • wretching — Present participle of wretch.
  • wrinklies — old people
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