7-letter words containing tw
- 'twould — it would
- antwerp — a province of N Belgium. Pop: 1 668 812 (2004 est). Area: 2859 sq km (1104 sq miles)
- antwren — any of several small antbirds, especially of the genus Myrmotherula.
- artware — an article of china, porcelain, glass, or the like, prized for its artistry and collected as an art object: a rare collection of artwares.
- artwork — Artwork is drawings and photographs that are prepared in order to be included in something such as a book or advertisement.
- atwater — a town in central California.
- batwing — shaped like the wings of a bat, as a black tie, collar, etc
- beltway — A beltway is a road that goes around a city or town, to keep traffic away from the centre.
- between — If something is between two things or is in between them, it has one of the things on one side of it and the other thing on the other side.
- betwixt — betwixt and between, neither the one nor the other; in a middle or unresolved position: Not wanting to side with either her father or her mother, she was betwixt and between.
- bitwise — (programming) A bitwise operator treats its operands as a vector of bits rather than a single number. Boolean bitwise operators combine bit N of each operand using a Boolean function (NOT, AND, OR, XOR) to produce bit N of the result. For example, a bitwise AND operator ("&" in C) would evaluate 13 & 9 as (binary) 1101 & 1001 = 1001 = 9, whereas, the logical AND, (C "&&") would evaluate 13 && 9 as TRUE && TRUE = TRUE = 1. In some languages, e.g. Acorn's BASIC V, the same operators are used for both bitwise and logical operations. This usually works except when applying NOT to a value x which is neither 0 (false) nor -1 (true), in which case both x and (NOT x) will be non-zero and thus treated as TRUE. Other operations at the bit level, which are not normally described as "bitwise" include shift and rotate.
- cartway — a cart track
- catwalk — At a fashion show, the catwalk is a narrow platform that models walk along to display clothes.
- catworm — an active carnivorous polychaete worm, Nephthys hombergii, that is about 10cm (4in) long, having a pearly sheen to its body: often dug for bait
- cutware — tools used in cutting, as knives or blades.
- cutwork — openwork embroidery in which the pattern is cut away from the background
- cutworm — the caterpillar of various noctuid moths, esp those of the genus Argrotis, which is a pest of young crop plants in North America
- entwine — Wind or twist together ; interweave.
- entwist — (transitive) To twist or wreathe around; entwine.
- fatware — (computing, informal) Bloatware.
- fatwood — kindling; lightwood.
- footway — a way or path for people going on foot.
- hotwash — Discussions and evaluations of an agency's (or multiple agencies') performance following an exercise, training session, or major event.
- hotwife — (slang) A married female swinger; a wife who has sex with men other than her husband, with the husband's approval.
- hotwire — Alternative spelling of hot-wire.
- intwine — Archaic spelling of entwine.
- intwist — entwist.
- kotwali — a police station.
- kotwals — Plural form of kotwal.
- matweed — any of several grasses that are used to make mats or that grow in a densely interwoven or tangled mass, esp mat grass, Nardus stricta
- ml-twig — A variant of TWIG in SML, by Jussi Rintanen <[email protected]>, which comes with SML/NJ.
- netware — Novell NetWare
- network — any netlike combination of filaments, lines, veins, passages, or the like: a network of arteries; a network of sewers under the city.
- nitwits — Plural form of nitwit.
- notwork — (networking, humour) /not'werk/ A network that is performing badly. Said at IBM to have originally referred to a particular period of flakiness on IBM's VNET corporate network ca. 1988; but there are independent reports of the term from elsewhere. The joke sounds better in Russian, where "nyet" means "no", hence nyetwork /nyet'werk/.
- nutwood — any of various nutbearing trees, as the hickory or walnut.
- one-two — Also called one-two punch. Boxing. a left-hand jab immediately followed by a right cross.
- ostwald — Wilhelm [vil-helm] /ˈvɪl hɛlm/ (Show IPA), 1853–1932, German chemist: Nobel prize 1909.
- outwait — to surpass in waiting or expecting; wait longer than.
- outwalk — to outdo in walking; walk faster or farther than.
- outward — proceeding or directed toward the outside or exterior, or away from a central point: the outward flow of gold; the outward part of a voyage.
- outwash — the material, chiefly sand or gravel, deposited by meltwater streams in front of a glacier.
- outwear — to wear or last longer than; outlast: a well-made product that outwears its competition.
- outweed — to root out
- outweep — to weep more or for a longer time than
- outwell — (archaic, intransitive) To well outward; to issue forth.
- outwent — simple past tense of outgo.
- outwick — to move (a curling stone) so that it strikes against the outer side of a stone that has already been played and turns towards the tee or (of a curling stone) to strike another stone in this manner
- outwile — a trick, artifice, or stratagem meant to fool, trap, or entice; device.
- outwill — to demonstrate a stronger will than
On this page, we collect all 7-letter words with TW. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 7-letter word that contains TW to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles.