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10-letter words containing a, t, w, e

  • white hass — a pudding containing oatmeal
  • white heat — a stage of intense activity, excitement, feeling, etc.: The sales campaign is at white heat.
  • white lady — a cocktail consisting of gin, Cointreau, and lemon juice
  • white lead — a white, heavy powder, basic lead carbonate, 2PbCO 3 ⋅Pb(OH) 2 , used as a pigment, in putty, and in medicinal ointments for burns.
  • white lias — a type of rock composed of pale-coloured limestones and marls
  • white meat — light-coloured poultry flesh
  • white pass — a mountain pass in SE Alaska, near Skagway. 2888 feet (880 meters) high.
  • white race — fair-skinned people
  • white sage — Also called greasewood. a shrubby plant, Salvia apiana, of the mint family, native to southern California, having white, hairy foliage and spikes of white or pale lavender flowers.
  • white sale — a sale of sheets, pillowcases, and other white goods.
  • white-face — a Hereford.
  • whitebeard — an old man, especially one with a white or gray beard.
  • whiteboard — a smooth, glossy sheet of white plastic that can be written on with a colored pen or marker in the manner of a blackboard.
  • whitebread — any white or light-colored bread made from finely ground, usually bleached, flour.
  • whitecedar — (US) alternative spelling of white cedar.
  • whitecoats — Plural form of whitecoat.
  • whiteheads — Plural form of whitehead.
  • whitepaper — Alternative spelling of white paper.
  • whitespace — Alternative spelling of white space.
  • whitewalls — Plural form of whitewall.
  • whitewater — of or moving over or through rapids: whitewater rafting down the Colorado River.
  • wholewheat — Denoting flour or bread made from whole grains of wheat, including the husk or outer layer.
  • wiesenthalSimon, 1908–2005, Austrian Holocaust survivor and hunter of Nazi war criminals.
  • wifebeater — One who (usually as a repeated practice) beats one’s wife, or a husband prone to violence.
  • wild beast — savage animal
  • wild water — turbulent water in a river, esp as an area for navigating in a canoe as a sport
  • wildcatted — Simple past tense and past participle of wildcat.
  • wildcatter — an oil prospector.
  • willamette — a river flowing N through NW Oregon into the Columbia River at Portland. About 290 miles (465 km) long.
  • willemstad — the main island of the Netherlands Antilles, off the NW coast of Venezuela. 173 sq. mi. (448 sq. km). Capital: Willemstad.
  • winetaster — a critic, writer, buyer, or other professional who tests the quality of wine by tasting.
  • winlestrae — windlestraw.
  • winstanley — Gerrard. ?1609–60, English radical; leader of the Diggers (1649–50) and author of the pamphlet The Law of Freedom in a Platform (1652)
  • winter war — the war of the winter of 1939–40 between Finland and the USSR after which the Finns surrendered the Karelian Isthmus to the USSR
  • wiretapped — Simple past tense and past participle of wiretap.
  • wiretapper — a person who taps wires to learn the nature of messages passing over them.
  • withdrawed — (nonstandard) Simple past tense and past participle of withdraw.
  • withdrawer — One who withdraws.
  • wolframate — tungstate.
  • wolframite — a mineral, iron manganese tungstate, (Fe,Mn)WO 4 , occurring in heavy grayish-black to brownish-black tabular or bladed crystals: an important ore of tungsten.
  • wool table — a slatted wooden table in a shearing shed where fleeces are skirted and classed
  • woolgather — to engage in woolgathering.
  • workbasket — a basket used to hold needlework paraphernalia.
  • workmaster — a master workman
  • workstream — The organised output of several distinct, and often unrelated, work groups.
  • worktables — Plural form of worktable.
  • world beat — (sometimes initial capital letters) any of various styles of popular music combining traditional, indigenous forms with elements of another culture's music, especially of Western rock and pop.
  • worm-eaten — eaten into or gnawed by worms.
  • worst case — of the worst possibility; being the worst result that could be expected under the circumstances: a worst-case scenario.
  • worst-case — of the worst possibility; being the worst result that could be expected under the circumstances: a worst-case scenario.
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