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6-letter words containing w, e

  • bewick — Thomas. 1753–1828, English wood engraver; his best-known works are Chillingham Bull (1789), a large woodcut, Aesop's Fables (1818), and his History of British Birds (1797–1804)
  • beworm — to fill or infest with worms
  • bewrap — to wrap up; to conceal
  • bewray — to divulge; reveal; betray
  • blewit — an edible pale-bluish mushroom, Tricholoma personatum.
  • blowed — a simple past tense and past participle of blow2 .
  • blower — The blower is the telephone.
  • blowie — a blowfly
  • blowse — a brash, red-faced woman
  • bowellSir Mackenzie, 1823–1917, Canadian statesman, born in England: prime minister 1894–96.
  • bowels — innards; entrails
  • bowers — a musician, as a violinist, who performs with a bow on a stringed instrument.
  • bowery — a farm or plantation of an early Dutch settler of New York
  • bowleg — a leg that curves outwards
  • bowler — The bowler in a sport such as cricket is the player who is bowling the ball.
  • bowles — Paul. 1910–99, US novelist, short-story writer, and composer, living in Tangiers. His novels include The Sheltering Sky (1949) and The Spider's House (1955)
  • bowser — a tanker containing fuel for aircraft, military vehicles, etc
  • bowsie — a low-class mean or obstreperous person
  • bowtel — boltel (def 1).
  • bowtie — a small necktie tied in a bow at the collar.
  • bowyer — a person who makes or sells archery bows
  • brewed — to make (beer, ale, etc.) by steeping, boiling, and fermenting malt and hops.
  • brewer — Brewers are people or companies who make beer.
  • brewis — bread soaked in broth, gravy, etc
  • browed — having a brow of a specified kind (usually used in combination): a shaggy-browed brute.
  • browne — Coral (Edith). 1913–91, Australian actress: married to Vincent Price
  • browse — If you browse in a shop, you look at things in a fairly casual way, in the hope that you might find something you like.
  • bulwerSir Henry (William Henry Lytton Earle Bulwer; Baron Dalling and Bulwer) 1801–72, British diplomat and author.
  • byelaw — a standing rule governing the regulation of a corporation's or society's internal affairs.
  • cashew — A cashew or a cashew nut is a curved nut that you can eat.
  • cawker — a metal projection on a horse's shoe which prevents slipping
  • cawley — Evonne (née Goolagong). born 1951, Australian tennis player: winner of seven Grand Slam singles titles including Wimbledon (1971,1980) and the Australian Open (1974–76, 1977 (December))
  • chawed — Simple past tense and past participle of chaw, i.e. nonstandard variant of chewed.
  • chewed — to crush or grind with the teeth; masticate.
  • chewer — One who chews.
  • chewet — a food made from minced meat or fish combined with fruit and spices and cooked by either baking, boiling, or frying
  • chewie — chewing gum
  • chowed — Simple past tense and past participle of chow.
  • clawed — having claws (sometimes used in combination): sharp-clawed.
  • clewed — Simple past tense and past participle of clew.
  • cobweb — A cobweb is the net which a spider makes for catching insects.
  • cowage — a tropical climbing leguminous plant, Stizolobium (or Mucuna) pruriens, whose bristly pods cause severe itching and stinging
  • cowdie — The kauri tree.
  • cowell — Simon. born 1959, British manager of pop groups and TV personality, best known as an outspoken judge on the TV talent contests Pop Idol (2001–04), The X Factor (from 2004), and Britain's Got Talent (from 2007)
  • cowers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cower.
  • cowled — wearing a cowl
  • cowley — Abraham. 1618–67, English poet and essayist, who introduced the Pindaric ode to English literature
  • cowmen — Plural form of cowman.
  • cowpea — a leguminous tropical climbing plant, Vigna sinensis, producing long pods containing edible pealike seeds: grown for animal fodder and sometimes as human food
  • cowper — William. 1731–1800, English poet, noted for his nature poetry, such as in The Task (1785), and his hymns
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