0%

8-letter words containing w

  • dogwoods — Plural form of dogwood.
  • doorways — Plural form of doorway.
  • dowagers — Plural form of dowager.
  • dowdiest — Superlative form of dowdy.
  • dowdyish — Like a dowdy; frumpy.
  • dowdyism — the quality of being dowdy
  • doweling — Also called dowel pin. Carpentry. a pin, usually round, fitting into holes in two adjacent pieces to prevent their slipping or to align them.
  • dowelled — Simple past tense and past participle of dowel.
  • dowering — Present participle of dower.
  • dowfness — the quality or characteristic of being dowf
  • down low — of or pertaining to men who secretly or discreetly have sex with other men: She once dated a down-low guy.
  • down-bow — (in bowing on a stringed instrument) a stroke bringing the tip of the bow toward the strings, indicated in scores by the symbol (opposed to up-bow).
  • down-low — of or pertaining to men who secretly or discreetly have sex with other men: She once dated a down-low guy.
  • downbeat — the downward stroke of a conductor's arm or baton indicating the first or accented beat of a measure.
  • downbent — Bent downward.
  • downcast — directed downward, as the eyes.
  • downcome — a downcomer.
  • downfall — descent to a lower position or standing; overthrow; ruin.
  • downflow — something that flows downwards
  • downhaul — any of various lines for pulling down a sail or a yard, as for securing in a lowered position when not in use.
  • downhill — down the slope of a hill; downward.
  • downhold — the act of keeping spending, expenses, losses, inflation, etc., as low as possible or advisable.
  • downhole — a hole dug or drilled downward, as in a mine or a petroleum or gas well.
  • downhome — Alternative form of down-home.
  • downiest — Superlative form of downy.
  • downland — An area of rolling downs, often grassy pasture over chalk or limestone.
  • downless — the soft, first plumage of many young birds.
  • downlike — having the quality or characteristics of feathers or down
  • downline — Alternative spelling of down line.
  • downlink — a transmission path for data or other signals from a communications satellite or airborne platform to an earth station.
  • download — to transfer (software, data, character sets, etc.) from a distant to a nearby computer, from a larger to a smaller computer, or from a computer to a peripheral device.
  • downmost — in the lowest position
  • downpipe — downspout.
  • downplay — to treat or speak of (something) so as to reduce emphasis on its importance, value, strength, etc.: The press has downplayed the president's role in the negotiations.
  • downpour — a heavy, drenching rain.
  • downrate — to lower the rate of: to downrate the speed of an economic recovery.
  • downrush — (intransitive) To rush down; rush downward.
  • downside — the lower side or part.
  • downsize — company: make redundancies
  • downspin — spin (def 19).
  • downstep — An downward shift of tone between the syllables or words of a tonal language.
  • downtake — a pipe or passage for conducting smoke, a current of air, or the like downward from a furnace, opening, etc.
  • downtick — a decline or deterioration in business activity, in mood, etc.
  • downtime — a time during a regular working period when an employee is not actively productive.
  • downtown — to or in the main business section of a city.
  • downtrod — tyrannized over; oppressed: the downtrodden plebeians of ancient Rome.
  • downturn — an act or instance of turning down or the state of being turned down: the downturn of a lower lip in a permanent pout.
  • downvote — such an unfavorable vote.
  • downward — Also, downwards. from a higher to a lower place or condition.
  • downwash — a deflection of air downward relative to an airfoil that causes the deflection.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?