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10-letter words containing d, o, w

  • crownbeard — any of various American composite plants constituting the genus Verbesina, having clustered, usually yellow flower heads.
  • curse word — a profane or obscene word, especially as used in anger or for emphasis.
  • dairywoman — a woman who owns, manages, or works in a dairy.
  • dairywomen — Plural form of dairywoman.
  • dawn horse — eohippus.
  • death blow — If you say that an event or action deals a death blow to something such as a plan or hope, or is a death blow to something, you mean that it puts an end to it.
  • deathblows — Plural form of deathblow.
  • decwindows — DEC's windowing environment based on the X Window System.
  • deflowered — Simple past tense and past participle of deflower.
  • deflowerer — One who deflowers.
  • denis howe — (person)   Denis B. Howe (1960 -) Editor of the Free On-line Dictionary of Computing.
  • devilwoods — Plural form of devilwood.
  • dirty word — a vulgar or taboo word; obscenity.
  • dirty work — disagreeable, often tedious tasks.
  • disallowed — Forbidden.
  • disavowing — Present participle of disavow.
  • discrowned — Simple past tense and past participle of discrown.
  • disembowel — to remove the bowels or entrails from; eviscerate.
  • disempower — to deprive of influence, importance, etc.: Voters feel they have become disempowered by recent political events.
  • disemvowel — to remove the vowels from (a word in a text message, email, etc) in order to abbreviate it
  • disendowed — Simple past tense and past participle of disendow.
  • disendower — One who disendows.
  • dish towel — cloth: for drying dishes
  • dishtowels — Plural form of dishtowel.
  • disownment — to refuse to acknowledge as belonging or pertaining to oneself; deny the ownership of or responsibility for; repudiate; renounce: to disown one's heirs; to disown a published statement.
  • disworship — to refuse to revere or worship
  • do without — Informal. a burst of frenzied activity; action; commotion.
  • do wonders — have a transforming effect
  • dockworker — a person employed on the docks of a port, as in loading and unloading vessels.
  • dog warden — dogcatcher.
  • dog-walker — a person who walks other people's dogs, especially for a fee.
  • dogwatches — Plural form of dogwatch.
  • dollarwise — as expressed in dollars; in dollars and cents: How much does a million francs amount to, dollarwise?
  • don't know — a person who has no opinion or is undecided, as in answering an item on a public-opinion poll.
  • don't-know — a person who has no opinion or is undecided, as in answering an item on a public-opinion poll.
  • donkeywork — Informal. tedious, repetitious work; drudgery.
  • doublewide — Alternative spelling of double-wide.
  • doubleword — two bytes considered as a single storage entity, used in some high-level programming languages.
  • down quark — a type of quark with a mass of c. 0.005 to 0.015 GeV/c2, a negative charge that is 1⁄3 the charge of an electron, zero charm, and zero strangeness
  • down under — Australia or New Zealand.
  • down-cycle — business: move downward
  • down-river — Something that is moving down-river is moving towards the mouth of a river, from a point further up the river. Something that is down-river is towards the mouth of a river.
  • downblouse — Describing a voyeuristic image of the view down a woman's cleavage.
  • downbursts — Plural form of downburst.
  • downcasted — Simple past tense and past participle of downcast.
  • downcomers — a pipe, tube, or passage for conducting fluid materials downward.
  • downcurved — curved downward at the edges or end: his downcurved mouth conveyed his disappointment; downcurved beak.
  • downdrafts — Plural form of downdraft.
  • downfallen — descent to a lower position or standing; overthrow; ruin.
  • downgraded — Simple past tense and past participle of downgrade.
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