0%

11-letter words containing d, r, a, w, h

  • shadow roll — sheepskin that is placed just below the eyes of a pacing horse in order to prevent it from seeing moving shadows cast by its body.
  • shadowgraph — a picture produced by throwing a shadow, as of the hands, on a lighted screen, wall, or the like.
  • show around — guide round a new place
  • shower head — nozzle of a shower attachment
  • southwardly — toward the south
  • stewardship — the position and duties of a steward, a person who acts as the surrogate of another or others, especially by managing property, financial affairs, an estate, etc.
  • swiss chard — chard.
  • switch yard — a railroad yard in which rolling stock is distributed or made up into trains.
  • switchboard — a structural unit on which are mounted switches and instruments necessary to complete telephone circuits manually.
  • thitherward — Also, thitherward [thith -er-werd, th ith -] /ˈθɪð ər wərd, ˈðɪð-/ (Show IPA), thitherwards. to or toward that place or point; there.
  • throw aside — If you throw aside a way of life, a principle, or an idea, you abandon it or reject it.
  • throw shade — to make a public show of contempt
  • under watch — If someone is being kept under watch, they are being guarded or observed all the time.
  • unweathered — not weathered; not changed by exposure to the weather
  • ward heeler — a minor politician who canvasses voters and does other chores for a political machine or party boss.
  • warmhearted — having or showing sympathy, affection, kindness, cordiality, etc.: a warm-hearted welcome.
  • warriorhood — The state of being a warrior.
  • watch guard — a short chain, cord, or ribbon for securing a watch when worn on the person.
  • wavy-haired — having wavy hair
  • weakhearted — without courage or fortitude; fainthearted.
  • weatherford — a town in N Texas.
  • weatherized — Simple past tense and past participle of weatherize.
  • wheat bread — a type of bread that consists of a mixture of enriched white flour and whole-wheat flour.
  • wheat ridge — a town in central Colorado, near Denver.
  • whidah bird — any of various predominantly black African weaverbirds of the genus Vidua and related genera, the males of which grow very long tail feathers in the breeding season
  • whiskerando — a man with extravagant whiskers
  • white alder — sweet pepperbush.
  • white bread — bread baked with bleached flour
  • white cedar — any of several chiefly coniferous trees valued for their wood, especially Chamaecyparis thyoides, of the eastern U.S., or Thuja occidentalis (northern white cedar) of northeastern North America.
  • white dwarf — a star, approximately the size of the earth, that has undergone gravitational collapse and is in the final stage of evolution for low-mass stars, beginning hot and white and ending cold and dark (black dwarf)
  • white-bread — pertaining to or characteristic of the white middle class; bourgeois: a typical white-bread suburban neighborhood.
  • whiteboards — Plural form of whiteboard.
  • whitherward — toward what place; in what direction.
  • whydah bird — any of various predominantly black African weaverbirds of the genus Vidua and related genera, the males of which grow very long tail feathers in the breeding season
  • wild radish — another name for white charlock
  • windcheater — a lightweight jacket for sports or other outdoor wear.
  • wire-haired — having coarse, stiff, wirelike hair.
  • witch alder — a shrub, Fothergilla gardenii, of the witch hazel family, native to the southeastern U.S., having spikes of white flowers that bloom before the leaves appear.
  • withdrawals — Plural form of withdrawal.
  • withdrawing — Present participle of withdraw.
  • withstander — A person who withstands or resists; an opponent.
  • word search — puzzle: words hidden in grid
  • work-harden — to toughen or strengthen (a metal) by cold-working or another mechanical process.
  • wrongheaded — wrong in judgment or opinion; misguided and stubborn; perverse.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?