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12-letter words containing e, a, r, w

  • cam follower — the slider or roller in contact with the cam that transmits the movement dictated by the cam profile
  • cape sparrow — a sparrow, Passer melanurus, very common in southern Africa: family Ploceidae
  • cape-frowardCape, a cape in S Chile, on the Strait of Magellan: southernmost point of mainland South America.
  • caraway seed — the pungent aromatic one-seeded fruit of this plant, used in cooking and in medicine
  • career woman — A career woman is a woman with a career who is interested in working and progressing in her job, rather than staying at home looking after the house and children.
  • carriageways — Plural form of carriageway.
  • carried away — to take or support from one place to another; convey; transport: He carried her for a mile in his arms. This elevator cannot carry more than ten people.
  • carrier wave — a wave of fixed amplitude and frequency that is modulated in amplitude, frequency, or phase in order to carry a signal in radio transmission, etc
  • carriwitchet — a conundrum, nonsensical question, or pun
  • carry weight — to be important, influential, etc.
  • cartwheeling — Present participle of cartwheel.
  • cassel brown — Vandyke brown.
  • caterwauling — the shrieking and yowling made by a cat, for example when it is on heat or fighting
  • cauliflowers — Plural form of cauliflower.
  • cave dweller — a prehistoric person; person who lives in a cave
  • chair warmer — an officeholder, employee, or the like, who accomplishes little, especially a person who holds an interim position.
  • chair-warmer — an officeholder, employee, or the like, who accomplishes little, especially a person who holds an interim position.
  • charles drewCharles Richard, 1904–50, U.S. physician: developer of blood-bank technique.
  • charles' law — the principle that all gases expand equally for the same rise of temperature if they are held at constant pressure: also that the pressures of all gases increase equally for the same rise of temperature if they are held at constant volume. The law is now known to be only true for ideal gases
  • cheese straw — a long thin cheese-flavoured strip of pastry
  • chew the rag — to converse idly; chat
  • chowderheads — Plural form of chowderhead.
  • churchwarden — In the Anglican Church, a churchwarden is the person who has been chosen by a congregation to help the vicar of a parish with administration and other duties.
  • cigar flower — the common name for a small, shrubby plant, Cuphea ignea, of the loosestrife family, native to Mexico and Jamaica, grown as an ornamental and houseplant: named for its red tubular flowers that resemble cigars.
  • clam chowder — chowder containing clams
  • come forward — If someone comes forward, they offer to do something or to give some information in response to a request for help.
  • computer law — a body of law arising out of the special conditions relating to the use of computers, as in computer crime or software copyright.
  • contrariwise — from a contrasting point of view; on the other hand
  • core drawing — drawing of fine tubing using wire as a mandrel.
  • core gateway — Historically, one of a set of gateways (routers) operated by the Internet Network Operations Center at Bolt, Beranek and Newman (BBN). The core gateway system formed a central part of Internet routing in that all groups must advertise paths to their networks from a core gateway.
  • corn earworm — the larva of the noctuid moth Heliothis armigera, which feeds on maize and many other crop plants
  • counterwoman — A woman who serves at a counter.
  • cowardliness — lacking courage; contemptibly timid.
  • craw-thumper — an ostentatiously pious person
  • crawler lane — a lane on an uphill section of a motorway reserved for slow vehicles
  • crawling peg — a method of stabilizing exchange rates, prices, etc, by maintaining a fixed level for a specified period or until the level has persisted at an upper or lower limit for a specified period and then permitting a predetermined incremental rise or fall
  • croquet lawn — a lawn where croquet is played
  • crown antler — the topmost prong of a stag's antler.
  • crown estate — the property owned by the British Crown; state-owned property
  • crowned head — a monarch
  • crumble away — disintegrate
  • csk software — (company)   An international software company formed by the merger of Quay Financial Software and Micrognosis, and fully owned by CSK Corporation, Japan. CSK Software is based in Frankfurt/Main (Germany) with offices in London (UK), Zurich (Switzerland), Madrid (Spain), and Singapore. Products segments are RDD: Real-time data delivery, main product is Slingshot for delivering real-time data over the Internet (real push technology). ETS: Electronic Trading Systems, price calculation and automatic trading (with connections to XONTRO and XETRA). EAI: Enterprise Application Integration, main product is XGen, a universal message converter with GUI and connections also to SWIFT. E-mail: <[email protected]>. Address: CSK Software AG, Opernplatz 2, D-60313 Frankfurt, Germany. Tel: +49 (69) 509 520. Fax: +49 (69) 5095 2333.
  • cutwork lace — point coupé (def 2).
  • cutwork-lace — Also called cutwork. a process for producing lace in which predetermined threads in the ground material are cut and removed in order to provide open areas for the insertion of ornamental patterns.
  • cylinder saw — crown saw.
  • dawn redwood — a deciduous conifer, Metasequoia glyptostroboides, native to China but planted in other regions as an ornamental tree: family Taxodiaceae. Until the 1940s it was known only as a fossil
  • dawson creek — a town in W Canada, in NE British Columbia: SE terminus of the Alaska Highway. Pop: 10 754 (2001)
  • deepwaterman — a ship that goes far out to sea and into deep water
  • delaware bay — an inlet of the Atlantic at the mouth of the Delaware river
  • derwentwater — a lake in NW England, in Cumbria in the Lake District. Area: about 8 sq km (3 sq miles)
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