Note: this is a beta project. No guarantees of accuracy or completeness are offered!
Popular: CC CP S SS NAP Random: LCU HIPEC MRN NGMS IOPS
Meanings and definitions for CWM
What does CWM stand for? What does CWM mean?
- Cwm (landform), a rounded, glaciated valley, also known as a corrie or cirque
- Cwm (software), a general-purpose data processor for the semantic web
- Cwm railway station, a station in Cwm, Blaenau Gwent, Wales, 1852–1963
- Cwm Rhondda, a famous Welsh hymn tune
- Cwm, Blaenau Gwent, a community in Wales
- Cwm, Llanrothal, a Jesuit gathering place in Herefordshire, England
- Cwm, Denbighshire, a community in Wales
- Cwm Cadnant, a community in Anglesey, north Wales
- Cwm Gwaun, a community in northern Pembrokeshire, Wales
- Western Cwm, a geographical feature on Mount Everest
- cwm (window manager) or Calm Window Manager, a stacking window manager for Unix systems
- Canadian War Museum, Canada’s national museum of military history
- Cape Wine Master, a South African wine industry qualification
- Christian Witness Ministries, a non-denominational church affiliation
- Circus World Museum, a large museum complex in Baraboo, Wisconsin
- Clark–Wilson model, a model for specifying and analyzing an integrity policy for a computing system
- ClockworkMod, open source firmware for smartphones
- Comes With Music, Nokia's digital music service
- Common Warehouse Metamodel, a data warehousing specification
- Contemporary worship music, a genre of Christian music used in contemporary worship
- Contingent Workforce Management, the strategic approach to managing an organization's contingent workforce
- Council for World Mission, a worldwide community of Christian churches
- Cwmbran railway station, station northeast of Cwmbran, Wales
- Coombe, South Australia, a locality in the Coorong District Council
- Coombe, Buckinghamshire
- Coombe, Bude, Cornwall
- Coombe, Camborne, Cornwall
- Coombe, Gwennap, Cornwall
- Coombe, Kea, Cornwall
- Coombe, Liskeard, Cornwall
- Coombe, St Austell, Cornwall
- Coombe, East Devon
- Coombe, Teignmouth, Devon
- Coombe, Tiverton, Devon
- Coombe, Gloucestershire
- Coombe, Hampshire
- Coombe, Kent
- Coombe, Croydon, London
- Coombe, Kingston upon Thames, London
- Coombe, Crewkerne, Somerset
- Coombe, Taunton, Somerset
- Coombe, Donhead St. Mary, Wiltshire
- Coombe, Enford, Wiltshire
- Coombe Bissett, Wiltshire
- Coombe Dingle, Bristol
- Coombe Fields, Warwickshire
Coombe Abbey, former country house, now a hotel
- Coombe Country Park, the former grounds of the house
- Coombe Hill Canal, Vale of Gloucester
- Coombe Keynes, Dorset
- The Coombe, Dublin, a historic street in Dublin
- Coombe Historic District, Felton, Kent County, Delaware
- Dorothy Coombe (1896–1982), Australian trade unionist
- E. H. Coombe (1858–1917), South Australian newspaper editor and politician
- Robert Coombe, American chemist and educator
- Rosemary J. Coombe, Canadian anthropologist and lawyer
- Coombe Hall (1871–1932), Scottish footballer who played for Blackburn Rovers
- Coombe Cellars, a public house in south Devon, England
- Coombe Boys' School, a secondary school, New Malden, London, England
- Coombe Clipless Pedal, a type of bicycle pedal
- Coombe Dean School, a specialist secondary school in Plymouth, Devon, England
- Coombe Girls' School, an all-female secondary school in New Malden, South-West London, England
- Coombe Women's Hospital, Dublin, Ireland
- Coombe Wood, a garden in the London Borough of Croydon, England
- Combs (surname)
- Coombes (surname)
- Coombes, West Sussex, England
- Arthur Coomb (born 1929), English cricketer
- Coomb (unit), a unit of measure by volume.
- Coombs test, an aid to medical diagnosis.
- Coomb Teak or Gmelina arborea, a medicinal tree.
- Deeping Coomb, a fictional deep valley in The Lord of the Rings.
- Combs-la-Ville, a commune in the southeastern suburbs of Paris
- Combs, Derbyshire, England
- Combs, Suffolk, England
- Combs, Arkansas, a community
- Combs, Kentucky, a community
- Combs Township, Carroll County, Missouri
- Comb, plural form
- Coombes
[beta] © 2024 • Main sources: Wikipedia & Silmaril • Try the Similarity engine • Made by This chap