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6-letter words containing w, e, r, o

  • owlery — a place that owls inhabit
  • powder — British Dialect. a sudden, frantic, or impulsive rush.
  • powers — ability to do or act; capability of doing or accomplishing something.
  • powter — to potter about, to do trifling simple tasks
  • prowed — the forepart of a ship or boat; bow.
  • prower — valiant.
  • reavow — to declare frankly or openly; own; acknowledge; confess; admit: He avowed himself an opponent of all alliances.
  • redowa — a Bohemian dance in two forms, one resembling the waltz or the mazurka, the other resembling the polka.
  • reflow — to flow again
  • reglow — the act of glowing again
  • regrow — to increase by natural development, as any living organism or part by assimilation of nutriment; increase in size or substance.
  • renown — widespread and high repute; fame.
  • replow — an agricultural implement used for cutting, lifting, turning over, and partly pulverizing soil.
  • reshow — to show again
  • restow — Nautical. to put (cargo, provisions, etc.) in the places intended for them. to put (sails, spars, gear, etc.) in the proper place or condition when not in use.
  • reword — to put into other words: to reword a contract.
  • rework — to work or form again: to rework gold.
  • rowena — a female given name.
  • rowley — Thomas. ?1586–?1642, English dramatist, who collaborated with John Ford and Thomas Dekker on The Witch of Edmonton (1621) and with Thomas Middleton on The Changeling (1622)
  • shower — a person or thing that shows.
  • stower — a person who stows
  • towery — having towers: a towery city.
  • towner — a thickly populated area, usually smaller than a city and larger than a village, having fixed boundaries and certain local powers of government.
  • towser — a big dog.
  • trowel — any of various tools having a flat blade with a handle, used for depositing and working mortar, plaster, etc.
  • twofer — a card or ticket entitling the holder to purchase two tickets to a theatrical performance at a reduced price.
  • weirdo — an odd, eccentric, or unconventional person.
  • weldor — to unite or fuse (as pieces of metal) by hammering, compressing, or the like, especially after rendering soft or pasty by heat, and sometimes with the addition of fusible material like or unlike the pieces to be united.
  • who're — Who're is a spoken form of 'who are'.
  • wholer — comprising the full quantity, amount, extent, number, etc., without diminution or exception; entire, full, or total: He ate the whole pie. They ran the whole distance.
  • whored — Simple past tense and past participle of whore.
  • whores — Plural form of whore.
  • wohler — Friedrich [free-drikh] /ˈfri drɪx/ (Show IPA), 1800–82, German chemist.
  • wolfer — a person who hunts wolves
  • wolver — a person who hunts for wolves.
  • womera — woomera.
  • wonder — to think or speculate curiously: to wonder about the origin of the solar system.
  • wonner — an inhabitant, an occupant
  • wooers — Plural form of wooer.
  • woofer — a loudspeaker designed for the reproduction of low-frequency sounds.
  • wooler — a domestic animal raised for its wool.
  • worble — Alternative form of wormil.
  • worded — a unit of language, consisting of one or more spoken sounds or their written representation, that functions as a principal carrier of meaning. Words are composed of one or more morphemes and are either the smallest units susceptible of independent use or consist of two or three such units combined under certain linking conditions, as with the loss of primary accent that distinguishes black·bird· from black· bird·. Words are usually separated by spaces in writing, and are distinguished phonologically, as by accent, in many languages.
  • wordle — One of several pivoted pieces forming the throat of an adjustable die used in drawing wire, lead pipe, etc.
  • worked — of, for, or concerning work: work clothes.
  • worker — a person or thing that works.
  • worlde — Archaic spelling of world.
  • wormed — Zoology. any of numerous long, slender, soft-bodied, legless, bilaterally symmetrical invertebrates, including the flatworms, roundworms, acanthocephalans, nemerteans, gordiaceans, and annelids.
  • wormer — A substance administered to animals or birds to expel parasitic worms.
  • worsen — Make or become worse.
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