10-letter words containing g, i, r, a
- weathering — the state of the atmosphere with respect to wind, temperature, cloudiness, moisture, pressure, etc.
- weighboard — a thin layer (e.g. shale or clay) between bands of thicker strata (e.g. limestone or sandstone)
- wharfinger — a person who owns or has charge of a wharf.
- whiggamore — one of a group of 17th-century Scottish insurgents
- whip graft — a graft prepared by cutting both the scion and the stock in a sloping direction and securing them by tying or taping.
- wholegrain — A cereal grain that contains cereal germ, endosperm, and bran, in contrast to refined grains, which retain only the endosperm.
- wing chair — a large upholstered chair having a back with wings.
- wing-weary — tired from flying or traveling.
- wingspread — the distance between the most outward tips of the wings when they are as extended as possible.
- wire gauge — a gauge calibrated for determining the diameter of wire.
- wire gauze — a gauzelike fabric woven of very fine wires.
- wire glass — a pane or sheet of glass having a network of wire embedded within it as a reinforcement.
- wire grass — Canada bluegrass.
- wire-gauge — a gauge calibrated for determining the diameter of wire.
- witchgrass — Any of several grasses, of the genus Panicum, often found as a weed.
- workingman — a man of the working class; a man, whether skilled or unskilled, who earns his living at some manual or industrial work.
- wranglings — Plural form of wrangling.
- wristguard — A band of leather or leatherlike material worn around the wrist for support and protection, especially for athletic activities such as archery and fencing.
- writ large — If you say that something is writ large, you mean that it is very obvious.
- xerophagia — The eating of dry food.
- yearningly — deep longing, especially when accompanied by tenderness or sadness: a widower's yearning for his wife.
- yurimaguas — a city in N Peru.
- zigzaggery — the quality or state of being zigzag
- zincograph — (formerly) a zinc plate produced by zincography.