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11-letter words containing k, e, n, w

  • weak ending — a verse ending in which the metrical stress falls on a word or syllable that would not be stressed in natural utterance, as a preposition, the object of which is carried over to the next line.
  • weak-minded — having or showing a lack of mental firmness; irresolute; vacillating.
  • weekend bag — weekender (def 3).
  • weekendings — weekends during which one goes away from home
  • well-linked — (of a gene) exhibiting linkage.
  • well-spoken — speaking well, fittingly, or pleasingly: The new chairwoman was very well-spoken.
  • wet blanket — person: spoilsport
  • wet-blanket — to extinguish (a fire) with a wet blanket.
  • whiskerando — a man with extravagant whiskers
  • wilkes land — a coastal region of Antarctica, S of Australia.
  • winckelmann — Johann Joachim [yoh-hahn yoh-ah-khim] /ˈyoʊ hɑn ˈyoʊ ɑ xɪm/ (Show IPA), 1717–68, German archaeologist and art historian.
  • wind-broken — having the breathing impaired; affected with heaves.
  • wind-shaken — affected by windshake.
  • windbreaker — A wind -resistant jacket with a close-fitting neck, waistband, and cuffs.
  • windom peak — a mountain in SW Colorado, in the San Juan Mountains. 14,082 feet (4292 meters).
  • wine bucket — A wine bucket is a container that holds ice cubes or cold water and ice. You can use it to put bottles of wine in and keep the wine cool.
  • winter park — a city in E Florida.
  • winterkills — Plural form of winterkill.
  • wireworking — the use of wire to make functional or decorative works
  • wonderworks — Plural form of wonderwork.
  • wonkishness — The state or condition of being wonkish.
  • work-harden — to toughen or strengthen (a metal) by cold-working or another mechanical process.
  • workbenches — Plural form of workbench.
  • working bee — a voluntary group doing a job for charity
  • workmanlike — like or befitting a workman.
  • wrest plank — the part of a piano in which the wrest pin is embedded
  • yellowknife — a territory of Canada lying N of 60 degrees N and extending E from the Yukon Territory to Nunavut. 519,732 sq. mi. (1,346,106 sq. km) Capital: Yellowknife.
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