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10-letter words containing k, e, t

  • watchmaker — a person whose occupation it is to make and repair watches.
  • water back — a reservoir or arrangement of tubing at the back of certain stoves or fireplaces for containing water to be heated by the fire.
  • water park — an amusement park featuring swimming pools, water slides, wave pools, fountains, or other attractions involving water.
  • water tank — cistern
  • water-sick — (of soil) unproductive due to excessive watering or salt residues from irrigation.
  • water-soak — to soak or saturate with water.
  • waterbucks — Plural form of waterbuck.
  • watermarks — Plural form of watermark.
  • waterquake — The event in which an earthquake happens underwater, usually in an ocean or lake.
  • waterskied — Simple past tense and past participle of waterski.
  • waterworks — (used with a singular or plural verb) a complete system of reservoirs, pipelines, conduits, etc., by which water is collected, purified, stored, and pumped to urban users.
  • wattlebark — a tanning substance obtained from black wattle tree bark
  • wattlework — a simple covering for a human dwelling constructed from interwoven branches and leaved twigs
  • weak point — an area of weakness
  • weeknights — Plural form of weeknight.
  • well-taken — soundly logical; worthy of consideration: Her advice is well-taken.
  • wheat cake — a pancake made of wheat flour.
  • white book — an official report issued by a government, usually bound in white.
  • white buck — a casual oxford shoe made of white buckskin.
  • white cake — a cake that is pale in color because its batter contains the whites of eggs but no yolks
  • white hake — a food fish, Urophycis tenuis, inhabiting marine waters, especially off the North Atlantic coast of the U.S.
  • white rock — a city in SW British Columbia, in SW Canada, SE of Vancouver.
  • white work — needlework done in white on fine white cloth, especially linen.
  • whitterick — a weasel or stout
  • winkle out — If you winkle information out of someone, you get it from them when they do not want to give it to you, often by tricking them.
  • winterkill — an act or instance of winterkilling.
  • woonsocket — a city in NE Rhode Island.
  • work ethic — a belief in the moral benefit and importance of work and its inherent ability to strengthen character.
  • work sheet — a sheet of paper on which a record of work, working time, etc. is kept
  • workbasket — a basket used to hold needlework paraphernalia.
  • workmaster — a master workman
  • worksheets — Plural form of worksheet.
  • workstream — The organised output of several distinct, and often unrelated, work groups.
  • worktables — Plural form of worktable.
  • wraithlike — an apparition of a living person supposed to portend his or her death.
  • wrinkliest — Superlative form of wrinkly.
  • write back — send a written or typed reply
  • wykehamist — a pupil or former pupil of Winchester College
  • yakety-yak — incessant talk, chatter
  • yarkant he — a river in NW China, flowing NE and joining the Aksu River to form the Tarim River. 500 miles (805 km) long.
  • yeast cake — a small cake of compacted yeast for baking or the like.
  • yesterweek — last week.
  • yoke front — oxbow front.
  • youthquake — (informal) A noticeable shift in society or culture in response to the activities or tastes of younger members of the culture.
  • yukon time — the civil time officially adopted for a country or region, usually the civil time of some specific meridian lying within the region. The standard time zones in the U.S. (Atlantic time, Eastern time, Central time, Mountain time, Pacific time, Yukon time, Alaska-Hawaii time, and Bering time) use the civil times of the 60th, 75th, 90th, 105th, 120th, 135th, 150th, and 165th meridians respectively, the difference of time between one zone and the next being exactly one hour.
  • zinckenite — a steel-gray mineral with metallic luster, lead antimony sulfide, Pb 6 Sb 14 S 27 .
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