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

  • tight forward — one of a number of forwards who are bound wholly into the scrum
  • twelfth grade — (in the US) the final year of secondary school after which students usually graduate at age 17 or 18
  • unwithdrawing — not withdrawing; not pulling back, retreating, or giving up
  • warmheartedly — Alternative form of warm-heartedly.
  • wash-and-wear — noting or pertaining to a garment that can be washed, that dries quickly, and that requires little or no ironing; drip-dry.
  • weather radar — radar designed or suitable for use in detecting clouds and precipitation.
  • weather-bound — delayed or shut in by bad weather.
  • weatherboards — Plural form of weatherboard.
  • weathercocked — Simple past tense and past participle of weathercock.
  • wedding march — a musical composition played during a wedding procession.
  • well-anchored — any of various devices dropped by a chain, cable, or rope to the bottom of a body of water for preventing or restricting the motion of a vessel or other floating object, typically having broad, hooklike arms that bury themselves in the bottom to provide a firm hold.
  • west hartford — a town in central Connecticut.
  • wheelbarrowed — Simple past tense and past participle of wheelbarrow.
  • whidah (bird) — whydah (bird)
  • whipped cream — dairy cream that has been whisked
  • whiskerandoed — having extravagant whiskers
  • white admiral — any color having components of both red and blue, such as lavender, especially one deep in tone.
  • white mustard — a pungent powder or paste prepared from the seed of the mustard plant, used as a food seasoning or condiment, and medicinally in plasters, poultices, etc.
  • whydah (bird) — any of several chiefly brown-and-black, African passerine birds (family Ploceidae): the male has long, drooping tail feathers during the breeding season
  • windsor chair — a wooden chair of many varieties, having a spindle back and legs slanting outward: common in 18th-century England and in the American colonies.
  • withdrawnness — The state or condition of being withdrawn or isolated.
  • wordsworthianWilliam, 1770–1850, English poet: poet laureate 1843–50.
  • world-shaking — of sufficient size or importance to affect the entire world: the world-shaking effects of an international clash.
  • wrongheadedly — In a wrongheaded manner.
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