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6-letter words containing w, n

  • hwange — a town in W Zimbabwe: coal mines. Pop: 42 581 (1992)
  • i know — I am already aware
  • impawn — to put in pawn; pledge.
  • in tow — to pull or haul (a car, barge, trailer, etc.) by a rope, chain, or other device: The car was towed to the service station.
  • in two — into halves
  • in-law — a relative by marriage.
  • indows — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of indow.
  • inflow — something that flows in; influx.
  • ingrow — To grow in; grow inwardly.
  • inlaws — Plural form of inlaw.
  • intown — being in the central or metropolitan area of a city or town: an intown motel.
  • inwale — (in an open boat) a horizontal timber binding together the frames along the top strake.
  • inwall — to enclose with a wall.
  • inward — toward the inside, interior, or center, as of a place, space, or body.
  • inwick — to perform a curling stroke in which the stone bounces off another stone and stops close to the tee
  • inwind — enwind.
  • inwith — within
  • inwork — to work or produce (a result) in
  • inworn — inwrought or worn in
  • inwove — Simple past form of inweave.
  • inwrap — enwrap.
  • jawans — Plural form of jawan.
  • jawing — Present participle of jaw.
  • jewing — one of a scattered group of people that traces its descent from the Biblical Hebrews or from postexilic adherents of Judaism; Israelite.
  • jowing — the ringing, tolling, or sound of a bell.
  • kerwin — a male given name.
  • knawel — any of several plants belonging to the genus Scleranthus, of the pink family, native to Eurasia, especially S. annuus, a common, low-growing weed that forms dense mats.
  • knowed — a simple past tense and past participle of know1 .
  • knowen — (archaic) Past participle of know.
  • knower — to perceive or understand as fact or truth; to apprehend clearly and with certainty: I know the situation fully.
  • knowes — knoll1 .
  • knowne — Archaic spelling of known.
  • knowns — Plural form of known.
  • kwanga — A type of Congolese bread made from manioc.
  • kwanza — a paper money, cupronickel coin, and monetary unit of Angola, equal to 100 lwei: replaced the escudo in 1977.
  • lawing — the principles and regulations established in a community by some authority and applicable to its people, whether in the form of legislation or of custom and policies recognized and enforced by judicial decision.
  • lawman — an officer of the law, as a sheriff or police officer.
  • lawmen — Plural form of lawman.
  • lawned — Provided with a lawn.
  • lawson — of or relating to a style of overstuffed sofa or chair that is boxy in shape, with square back and seat cushions and broad, square or rounded arms that are lower in height than the back: a Lawson sofa.
  • lawton — a city in SW Oklahoma.
  • lowing — to burn; blaze.
  • luwian — an extinct ancient Anatolian language written in cuneiform.
  • manhwa — (comics) Korean comics.
  • manway — a passage in a mine wide enough for a single person.
  • mawkin — malkin.
  • mawsonSir Douglas, 1882–1958, Australian antarctic explorer, born in England.
  • mcewan — Ian (Russell). born 1948, British novelist and short-story writer. His books include First Love, Last Rites (1975), The Child in Time (1987), The Innocent (1990), Amsterdam (which won the Booker prize in 1998), Atonement (2001), Saturday (2005), and On Chesil Beach (2007)
  • mcewen — Sir John. 1900–80, Australian politician; prime minister of Australia (1967–68)
  • merwin — W(illiam) S(tanley) born 1927, U.S. poet, translator, and writer.
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