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11-letter words containing d, r, o, w

  • well-worked — that has undergone working.
  • wereleopard — (fiction) A shapeshifter who can change between leopard and human form.
  • west jordan — a town in N central Utah.
  • westmorland — a former county in NW England, now part of Cumbria, partially in the Lake District.
  • whiskerando — a man with extravagant whiskers
  • white-robed — clothed in a white robe.
  • whiteboards — Plural form of whiteboard.
  • whodunnitry — the style or genre of novels, plays, etc concerned with crime
  • widowerhood — The state or period of being a widower.
  • widowmakers — Plural form of widowmaker.
  • wild carrot — an umbelliferous plant, Daucus carota, of temperate regions, having clusters of white flowers and hooked fruits
  • wild flower — the flower of a plant that normally grows in fields, forests, etc., without deliberate cultivation.
  • wild orange — laurel cherry.
  • wildflowers — Plural form of wildflower.
  • wind-broken — having the breathing impaired; affected with heaves.
  • windsor tie — a wide, soft necktie of black silk, tied at the neck in a loose bow.
  • witchdoctor — Alternative form of witch doctor.
  • withindoors — into or inside the house.
  • wizard book — (publication)   Hal Abelson, Gerald Sussman and Julie Sussman's "Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs" (MIT Press, 1984; ISBN 0-262-01077-1), an excellent computer science text used in introductory courses at MIT. So called because of the wizard on the jacket. One of the bibles of the LISP/Scheme world. Also, less commonly, known as the Purple Book.
  • wokka board — a piece of fibreboard used as a musical instrument
  • wolf spider — any of numerous ground spiders of the family Lycosidae, including the southern European tarantula, Lycosa taretula, that hunt their prey instead of using a web.
  • wonder drug — a drug, usually recently discovered or developed, noted for its startling curative effect, as an antibiotic or sulfa drug.
  • wonder girl — an outstanding girl or woman
  • wonderberry — the black, edible fruit of an improved garden variety of the black nightshade.
  • wonderbread — (pejorative, slang, ethnic slur) A white person.
  • wonderfully — excellent; great; marvelous: We all had a wonderful weekend.
  • wonderingly — In a wondering manner; with wonderment.
  • wonderlands — Plural form of wonderland.
  • wonderworks — Plural form of wonderwork.
  • wood grouse — the capercaillie.
  • wood rabbit — a cottontail.
  • wood sorrel — any of numerous plants of the genus Oxalis, especially O. acetosella, of Eurasia, having heart-shaped, trifoliolate leaves and white, pink-veined flowers.
  • wood spirit — methyl alcohol.
  • wood thrush — a large thrush, Hylocichla mustelina, common in woodlands of eastern North America, and noted for its melodious song.
  • woodcarving — the art or technique of carving objects by hand from wood or of carving decorations into wood.
  • woodchipper — a motor-driven machine that cuts wood into chips.
  • woodchopper — a person who chops wood, especially one who fells trees.
  • woodcrafter — a person who makes or carves wooden objects.
  • woodcreeper — any of numerous New World tropical songbirds of the family Dendrocolaptidae, having stiffened tail feathers and creeperlike habits.
  • woodcutters — Plural form of woodcutter.
  • woodpeckers — Plural form of woodpecker.
  • woodturning — The action of shaping wood with a lathe.
  • woodworking — the act or art of making things of wood.
  • word accent — word stress.
  • word of godthe, word (def 11).
  • word search — puzzle: words hidden in grid
  • word square — a set of words such that when arranged one beneath another in the form of a square they read alike horizontally and vertically.
  • word stress — the stress pattern or patterns associated with the words of a particular language when they are considered in isolation.
  • wordishness — the use or manner of using words
  • wordperfect — 1.   (text, tool, product)   A word processor for a wide range of computers. The first version was sold in 1980 for Data General machines, and by the end of 1993 versions were on sale for MS-DOS, Microsoft Windows and Macintosh computers. WordPerfect 6.0 for Unix was scheduled for introduction in May 1994. Versions: WordPerfect 6.1 for Windows, WordPerfect 3.1 for Macintosh/Power Macintosh, WordPerfect 6.0 for UNIX, WordPerfect 6.0 for DOS, WordPerfect 7.0 for Windows 95. 2. WordPerfect Corporation.
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