Welcome to Anagrammer Crossword Genius! Keep reading below to see if entwi is an answer to any crossword puzzle or word game (Scrabble, Words With Friends etc). Scroll down to see all the info we have compiled on entwi.
entwi
Searching in Crosswords ...
The answer ENTWI has 0 possible clue(s) in existing crosswords.
Searching in Word Games ...
The word ENTWI is NOT valid in any word game. (Sorry, you cannot play ENTWI in Scrabble, Words With Friends etc)
There are 5 letters in ENTWI ( E1I1N1T1W4 )
To search all scrabble anagrams of ENTWI, to go: ENTWI?
Rearrange the letters in ENTWI and see some winning combinations
Scrabble results that can be created with an extra letter added to ENTWI
5 letters out of ENTWI
Searching in Dictionaries ...
Definitions of entwi in various dictionaries:
ENTWI - The Entwicklung series (from German Entwicklung, "development"), more commonly known as the E-Series, was a late-World War II attempt by Germany to p...
Word Research / Anagrams and more ...
Keep reading for additional results and analysis below.
| Entwi might refer to |
|---|
|
The Entwicklung series (from German Entwicklung, "development"), more commonly known as the E-Series, was a late-World War II attempt by Germany to produce a standardised series of tank designs. There were to be standard designs in six different weight classes,(E-5,E-10,E-25,E-50,E-75 and E-100) from which several specialised variants were to be developed. This intended to reverse the trend of extremely complex tank designs that had resulted in poor production rates and mechanical unreliability. * The E-series designs were simpler, cheaper to produce and more efficient than their predecessors; however, their design offered only modest improvements in armour and firepower over the designs they were intended to replace, such as the Jagdpanzer 38(t), Panther Ausf.G or Tiger II; and would have represented the final standardization of German armoured vehicle design. Indeed, nearly all of the E-series vehicles — up through and including the E-75 — were intended to use what were essentially the Tiger II's eighty centimeter diameter, steel-rimmed road wheels for their suspension, meant to overlap each other (as on the later production Tiger I-E and Panther designs that also used them), abandoning the interleaved Shachtellaufwerk roadwheel system that first appeared on German military half-tracks in the early 1930s. |