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

  • waterbucks — Plural form of waterbuck.
  • waterbuses — Plural form of waterbus.
  • wattlebark — a tanning substance obtained from black wattle tree bark
  • wattlebird — any of several Australian honey eaters of the genus Anthochaera, most of which have fleshy wattles at the sides of the neck.
  • wax tablet — a tablet made of bone, wood, etc., and covered with wax, used by the ancients for writing with a stylus.
  • web editor — software for creating internet content
  • web offset — a method of offset printing using a web press
  • web-footed — a foot with the toes joined by a web.
  • webcasting — the broadcasting of news, entertainment, etc., using the Internet, specifically the World Wide Web.
  • webmasters — Plural form of webmaster.
  • webmeister — (computing, informal) A webmaster.
  • webobjects — (operating system)   Apple Computer, Inc.'s application server framework for developing dynamic web applications. WebObjects applications accept HTTP requests either directly (usually on a specific port) or via an adaptor that sits between them and the web server. Adaptors are either CGI programs or web server plug-ins (NSAPI or ISAPI). The server processes special tags in HTML pages to produce dynamic but standard HTML. Tools are provided to easily set and get object properties and invoke methods from these tags. Applications can maintain state over multiple HTTP request-response transactions (which are intrinsically stateless). Applications can also use Apple's Enterprise Object Framework object relational mapping libraries for object persistence and database access. WebObjects was originally based on Objective C and a simple scripting language but now is more likely to be used with Java. Versions are available for OS X, Windows and Unix. Apple acquired WebObjects from NeXT, along with Steve Jobs.
  • websterian — pertaining to or characteristic of Daniel Webster, his political theories, or his oratory.
  • websterite — aluminite.
  • wedge tomb — a Neolithic chamber tomb found in the British Isles, having a trapezoidal or D-shaped cairn and a long, narrow chamber opening into it from the wider, higher side.
  • well-built — simple past tense and past participle of build.
  • whaleboats — Plural form of whaleboat.
  • wheat beer — any of various beers brewed using a mixture of wheat malt and barley malt
  • whereabout — whereabouts.
  • white bass — an edible freshwater fish, Morone chrysops, of the Great Lakes and Mississippi River drainage, silvery with yellow below and having the sides streaked with blackish lines.
  • white bear — polar bear.
  • white belt — a white cloth waistband worn by a beginner in one of the martial arts, as judo or karate.
  • white book — an official report issued by a government, usually bound in white.
  • white buck — a casual oxford shoe made of white buckskin.
  • white crab — ghost crab.
  • whitebeard — an old man, especially one with a white or gray beard.
  • whitebelly — (zoology) Applied to various kinds of animal characterized by a white belly.
  • 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.
  • wifebeater — One who (usually as a repeated practice) beats one’s wife, or a husband prone to violence.
  • wild beast — savage animal
  • wildebeest — gnu.
  • wittenberg — a city in central E Germany, on the Elbe: Luther taught in the university here; beginnings of the Reformation 1517.
  • woe betide — If you say woe betide anyone who does a particular thing, you mean that something unpleasant will happen to them if they do it.
  • wool table — a slatted wooden table in a shearing shed where fleeces are skirted and classed
  • workbasket — a basket used to hold needlework paraphernalia.
  • 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.
  • write back — send a written or typed reply
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