9-letter words containing o, l, d, e, w
- lansdowne — Henry Charles Keith Petty-Fitzmaurice [pet-ee-fits-mawr-is,, -mor-] /ˈpɛt i fɪtsˈmɔr ɪs,, -ˈmɒr-/ (Show IPA), 5th Marquis of, 1845–1927, British statesman: viceroy of India 1888–94, foreign secretary 1900–05.
- late wood — summerwood.
- leadworks — a factory that makes things out of lead
- leadworts — Plural form of leadwort.
- lemonwood — a tropical American tree, Calycophyllum candidissimum, of the madder family, having flowers with conspicuous white calyx lobes.
- lifeworld — All the immediate experiences, activities, and contacts that make up the world of an individual or corporate life.
- live down — to have life, as an organism; be alive; be capable of vital functions: all things that live.
- locoweeds — Plural form of locoweed.
- low rider — an individually decorated and customized car fitted with hydraulic jacks that permit lowering of the chassis nearly to the road.
- low-grade — of an inferior quality, worth, value, etc.: The mine yields low-grade silver ore.
- lowballed — Simple past tense and past participle of lowball.
- lowlander — a native of the Lowlands.
- lowlihead — lowly state; lowliness.
- macdowell — Edward Alexander, 1861–1908, U.S. composer and pianist.
- maplewood — a city in SE Minnesota, near St. Paul.
- melt down — substance
- meltdowns — Plural form of meltdown.
- new blood — If people talk about bringing new blood into an organization or sports team, they are referring to new people who are likely to improve the organization or team.
- new world — Western Hemisphere (def 1).
- oddfellow — a member of a social and benevolent society that originated in England in the 18th century.
- old sweat — an old soldier; veteran
- old welsh — the Welsh language of the period before c1150 a.d.
- olivewood — the wood of the olive tree
- pewholder — a person who leases or is the owner of a pew or an area of seats in a church
- pilotweed — the compass plant, Silphium laciniatum.
- rosenwald — Julius, 1862–1932, U.S. businessman and philanthropist.
- saddlebow — the arched front part of a saddle or saddletree.
- scaledown — a reduction in size, quantity, or activity according to a fixed scale or proportion: a scaledown of military expenditures.
- seldshown — seldom shown
- slideshow — a presentation of photographic slides, or images on a transparent base, placed in a projector and viewed sequentially on a screen.
- snowblade — one of a pair of short skis used without poles
- snowfield — a large and relatively permanent expanse of snow.
- snowslide — an avalanche consisting largely or entirely of snow.
- spelldown — a spelling competition that begins with all the contestants standing and that ends when all but one, the winner, have been required to sit down due to a specified number of misspellings.
- spot-weld — to weld (two pieces of metal) together in a small area or spot by the application of heat and pressure.
- the wolds — a range of chalk hills in NE England: consists of the Yorkshire Wolds to the north, separated from the Lincolnshire Wolds by the Humber estuary
- towelhead — an offensive term for someone who wears a turban
- twolegged — having two legs.
- unallowed — Physics. involving a change in quantum numbers, permitted by the selection rules: allowed transition.
- underflow — to move along in a stream: The river flowed slowly to the sea.
- underwool — underfur.
- wallopped — Simple past tense and past participle of wallop.
- well done — congratulations
- well told — simple past tense and past participle of tell1 .
- well-done — performed accurately and diligently; executed with skill and efficiency.
- well-shod — a simple past tense and past participle of shoe.
- well-trod — a simple past tense and past participle of tread.
- welldoing — good conduct or action.
- wellywood — the film production business located in Wellington, New Zealand
- wholefood — food with little or no refining or processing and containing no artificial additives or preservatives; natural or organic food.