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7-letter words containing n, w

  • c and w — country-and-western.
  • cawings — Plural form of cawing.
  • chewing — Present participle of chew.
  • chewink — a North American bird, Pipilo erythrophthalmus
  • chinwag — a chat or gossipy conversation
  • chowing — Present participle of chow.
  • clawing — a sharp, usually curved, nail on the foot of an animal, as on a cat, dog, or bird.
  • clawson — a city in SE Michigan.
  • clowned — Simple past tense and past participle of clown.
  • concrew — to grow together
  • coowner — Someone who owns something together with one or more other people.
  • cornrow — If someone wears their hair in cornrows, they braid their hair in parallel rows that lie flat upon their head.
  • cowbane — any of several N temperate poisonous umbelliferous marsh plants of the genus Cicuta, esp C. virosa, having clusters of small white flowers
  • cowbind — any of various bryony plants, esp the white bryony
  • cowhand — a hired man who herds and tends cattle, usually on horseback, esp in the western US
  • cowling — a streamlined metal covering, esp one fitted around an aircraft engine
  • cowskin — the skin of a cow.
  • cowtown — a small town in a cattle-raising area
  • crewing — a group of persons involved in a particular kind of work or working together: the crew of a train; a wrecking crew.
  • crewman — A crewman is a member of a crew.
  • crewmen — Plural form of crewman.
  • crowing — the sound made by a cock, particularly in the early morning
  • crowned — characterized by or having a crown (often used in combination): a crowned signet ring; a low-crowned fedora.
  • crowner — a promotional label consisting of a shaped printed piece of card or paper attached to a product on display
  • crownet — a coronet.
  • cum new — (of shares, etc) with rights to take up any scrip or rights issue
  • cutdown — a decrease or reduction in the number, size, or incidence of anything
  • cwmbran — a new town in SE Wales, in Torfaen county borough, developed in the 1950s. Pop: 47 254 (2001)
  • cynwulf — Cynewulf.
  • danelaw — the northern, central and eastern parts of Anglo-Saxon England in which Danish law and custom were observed
  • dawkins — Richard. born 1941, British zoologist, noted for such works as The Selfish Gene (1976), The Blind Watchmaker (1986), The God Delusion (2006), and The Greatest Show on Earth (2009)
  • dawn on — If a fact or idea dawns on you, you realize it.
  • dawning — gradually beginning to become light
  • de wint — Peter. 1784–1849, English landscape painter
  • decrown — to divest (a person) of the role of monarch
  • derwent — a river in S Australia, in S Tasmania, flowing southeast to the Tasman Sea. Length: 172 km (107 miles)
  • despawn — (video games) To dematerialize; to disappear from the game world.
  • dingwad — (informal) A stupid person.
  • disgown — to remove a gown from (esp in a religious or academic sense)
  • disowns — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disown.
  • diswarn — (obsolete) To dissuade from by previous warning.
  • do down — If someone does you down, they try to you make other people think that you are unpleasant or unsuccessful by criticizing you.
  • dogtown — a community of prairie dogs
  • dowding — Baron Hugh Caswall Tremenheere, nicknamed Stuffy. 1882–1970, British air chief marshal. As commander in chief of Fighter Command (1936–40), he contributed greatly to the British victory in the Battle of Britain (1940)
  • dowlandJohn, 1563–1626, English lutenist and composer.
  • dowlney — light, soft, and fluffy
  • down on — from higher to lower; in descending direction or order; toward, into, or in a lower position: to come down the ladder.
  • down to — the responsibility or fault of
  • downcry — to denigrate or disparage
  • downers — Plural form of downer.
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