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14-letter words containing k, n, o, w

  • stock watering — the creation of more new shares in a company than is justified by its assets
  • take one's way — to go on a journey; travel
  • the unknowable — the ultimate reality that underlies all phenomena but cannot be known
  • throwing stick — a short, straight or curved stick, flat or cylindrical in form, often having a hand grip, and used generally in preliterate societies as a hunting weapon to throw at birds and small game.
  • to know better — If someone knows better than to do something, they are old enough or experienced enough to know it is the wrong thing to do.
  • to think twice — If you think twice about doing something, you consider it again and decide not to do it, or decide to do it differently.
  • unacknowledged — widely recognized; generally accepted: an acknowledged authority on Chinese art.
  • uncrowned king — a man or woman of high status among a certain group
  • unforeknowable — not foreknowable
  • unknown factor — a factor that is not known or understood
  • voluntary work — unpaid employment for a cause
  • walk-in closet — a closet that is large enough to walk around in.
  • walkaround pay — extra pay earned by an employee for accompanying an official inspector on a plant tour or around a job site.
  • walking shorts — medium to long shorts, often cut fuller than Bermuda shorts and used for walking or leisure activity.
  • wardrobe trunk — a large, upright trunk, usually with space on one side for hanging clothes and drawers or compartments on the other for small articles, shoes, etc.
  • wild monkshood — a plant, Aconitum uncinatum, of the buttercup family, native to the eastern central U.S., having roundish leaves and hooded, blue flowers, growing in rich, moist soil.
  • windsor rocker — a Windsor chair on rockers
  • wollaston lake — a lake in NE Saskatchewan, in central Canada. About 796 sq. mi. (2062 sq. km).
  • work placement — temporary job, internship
  • working memory — temporary or short-term recall
  • working papers — documents permitting employment
  • you don't know — You can say 'You don't know' in order to emphasize how strongly you feel about the remark you are going to make.
  • you never know — You say 'You never know' or 'One never knows' to indicate that it is not definite or certain what will happen in the future, and to suggest that there is some hope that things will turn out well.
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