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

  • campbeltown — a seaport on the Kintyre peninsula, in SW Scotland: resort.
  • counterblow — a retaliatory blow
  • curb weight — the weight of an automotive vehicle including fuel, coolant, and lubricants but excluding occupants and cargo.
  • dumb waiter — A dumb waiter is a lift used to carry food and dishes from one floor of a building to another.
  • dumbwaiters — Plural form of dumbwaiter.
  • dust bowler — a person who is a native or resident of a dust bowl region.
  • elbow joint — the joint between the upper arm and the forearm, formed by the junction of the radius and ulna with the humerus
  • embowelment — a disembowelment
  • embowerment — the act of embowering
  • fast bowler — a bowler who characteristically delivers the ball rapidly
  • in bed with — in collusion with
  • jew-baiting — active anti-Semitism.
  • kerb weight — the weight of a motor car without occupants, luggage, etc
  • know better — be sufficiently wise
  • late hebrew — the Hebrew language as used from about a.d. 70 through the 13th century, including Mishnaic Hebrew and Medieval Hebrew.
  • lumber with — If you are lumbered with someone or something, you have to deal with them or take care of them even though you do not want to and this annoys you.
  • misbestowal — a wrong or improper bestowal
  • new britain — the largest island in the Bismarck Archipelago, Papua New Guinea, in the W central Pacific Ocean. About 14,600 sq. mi. (37,814 sq. km). Capital: Rabaul.
  • newburyport — a city in NE Massachusetts.
  • objectworks — An object-oriented development environment developed by ParcPlace, available under Smalltalk and C++.
  • oxbow chest — a chest of drawers having a front convex at the sides and concave in the center without vertical divisions.
  • powerboater — a powerboat owner or operator.
  • robert owenSir Richard, 1804–92, English zoologist and anatomist.
  • sweat blood — to perspire, especially freely or profusely.
  • sweet basil — any of several aromatic herbs belonging to the genus Ocimum, of the mint family, as O. basilicum (sweet basil) having purplish-green ovate leaves used in cooking.
  • sweet birch — a North American tree, Betula lenta, having smooth, blackish bark and twigs that are a source of methyl salicylate.
  • sweet herbs — sweet-smelling herbs that are grown specifically for cooking
  • sweet shrub — Carolina allspice.
  • sweetlambda — Sugared lambda-calculus(?).
  • switchblade — a pocketknife, the blade of which is held by a spring and can be released suddenly, as by pressing a button.
  • the beltway — Washington, D.C., esp. as regarded as the center of U.S. government and politics: so called from the expressway around the District of Columbia & nearby areas
  • thimbleweed — any of several plants having a thimble-shaped fruiting head, especially either of two white-flowered North American plants, Anemone riparia or A. virginiana.
  • timber wolf — the gray wolf, Canis lupus, sometimes designated as the subspecies C. lupus occidentalis: formerly common in northern North America but now greatly reduced in number and rare in the conterminous U.S.
  • toilet bowl — the ceramic bowl of a toilet.
  • tower block — a high-rise building.
  • tribeswoman — a female member of a tribe.
  • trombe wall — a glass-fronted exterior masonry wall that absorbs solar heat for radiation into a building.
  • tumble down — collapse, fall
  • tumble-down — dilapidated; ruined; rundown: He lived in a tumble-down shack.
  • twin-bedded — A twin-bedded room has two single beds.
  • unbeknownst — unknown; unperceived; without one's knowledge (usually followed by to).
  • unwatchable — detectable; apparent.
  • waldsterben — the symptoms of tree decline in central Europe from the 1970s, considered to be caused by atmospheric pollution
  • war cabinet — government wartime committee
  • warrantable — capable of being warranted.
  • wastebasket — a standing basket for wastepaper, small items of trash, etc.
  • water brash — heartburn (def 1).
  • water table — the planar, underground surface beneath which earth materials, as soil or rock, are saturated with water.
  • water-borne — A water-borne disease or infection is one that people can catch from infected water.
  • wattlebirds — Plural form of wattlebird.
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