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10-letter words containing e, n, w

  • weathering — the state of the atmosphere with respect to wind, temperature, cloudiness, moisture, pressure, etc.
  • weatherman — a person who forecasts and reports the weather; meteorologist.
  • weathermen — Plural form of weatherman.
  • web beacon — a very small graphic image or other object embedded in an HTML-formatted web page or email, used to track the online actions and activity of users: Web beacons that monitor customer preferences.
  • web design — a person who plans, designs, creates, and often maintains websites.
  • webcasting — the broadcasting of news, entertainment, etc., using the Internet, specifically the World Wide Web.
  • weblogging — (computing) The design and editing of a weblog; blogging.
  • websterian — pertaining to or characteristic of Daniel Webster, his political theories, or his oratory.
  • websurfing — Present participle of websurf.
  • wednesdays — on or during Wednesdays; every Wednesday.
  • wee-weeing — urine.
  • weekenders — Plural form of weekender.
  • weeknights — Plural form of weeknight.
  • weigh down — to determine or ascertain the force that gravitation exerts upon (a person or thing) by use of a balance, scale, or other mechanical device: to weigh oneself; to weigh potatoes; to weigh gases.
  • weight man — a person whose work is to weigh goods or merchandise.
  • weightings — Plural form of weighting.
  • weimaraner — one of a German breed of hunting dogs having a smooth silver-gray to dark-gray coat, a cropped tail, and blue-gray or amber eyes.
  • weinberger — Caspar W(illard) ("Cap") 1917–2006, U.S. government official: Secretary of Defense 1981–87.
  • well up in — well acquainted with (a particular subject); knowledgeable about
  • well-being — a good or satisfactory condition of existence; a state characterized by health, happiness, and prosperity; welfare: to influence the well-being of the nation and its people.
  • well-doing — good conduct or action.
  • well-drawn — past participle of draw.
  • well-found — well-furnished with supplies, necessaries, etc.: a well-found ship.
  • well-known — clearly or fully known: The well-known reasons are obvious.
  • well-lined — provided with large amounts of money
  • well-meant — A well-meant decision, action, or comment is intended to be helpful or kind but is unsuccessful or causes problems.
  • well-named — a word or a combination of words by which a person, place, or thing, a body or class, or any object of thought is designated, called, or known.
  • well-noted — well-known; celebrated; famous: a noted scholar.
  • well-shown — a past participle of show.
  • well-spent — simple past tense and past participle of spend.
  • well-taken — soundly logical; worthy of consideration: Her advice is well-taken.
  • well-toned — any sound considered with reference to its quality, pitch, strength, source, etc.: shrill tones.
  • well-woman — a woman who, although not ill, attends a health-service clinic for preventive monitoring, health education, and advice
  • wellington — a country in the S Pacific, SE of Australia, consisting of North Island, South Island, and adjacent small islands: a member of the Commonwealth of Nations. 103,416 sq. mi. (267,845 sq. km). Capital: Wellington.
  • wellspring — the head or source of a spring, stream, river, etc.; fountainhead.
  • welsh pony — one of a breed of small, sturdy ponies raised originally in Wales.
  • welshwoman — a woman who is a native or inhabitant of Wales.
  • wenceslaus — 1361–1419, emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 1378–1400; as Wenceslaus IV, king of Bohemia 1378–1419.
  • wentletrap — any of several marine gastropods of the family Epitonii (Scalariidae), having a whitish, spiraled shell.
  • wesermunde — former name of Bremerhaven.
  • west ender — a native or inhabitant of the West End of London
  • west haven — a town in S Connecticut, near New Haven.
  • west irian — a former name of Irian Jaya.
  • west point — a military reservation in SE New York, on the Hudson: U.S. Military Academy.
  • west saxon — the Old English dialect of the West Saxon kingdom, dominant after a.d. c850 and the medium of nearly all the literary remains of Old English.
  • westerners — Plural form of westerner.
  • westernise — Non-Oxford British standard spelling of westernize.
  • westernism — a word, idiom, or practice characteristic of people of the Occident or of the western U.S.
  • westernize — to influence with ideas, customs, practices, etc., characteristic of the Occident or of the western U.S.
  • wetterhorn — a mountain in S Switzerland, in the Bernese Alps. 12,149 feet (3715 meters).
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