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

  • marrow bone — Marrow bones are the bones of certain animals, especially cows, that contain a lot of bone marrow. They are used in cooking and in dog food.
  • marrowbones — Plural form of marrowbone.
  • mdewakanton — a member of a North American Indian people belonging to the Santee branch of the Dakota.
  • meadowlands — Plural form of meadowland.
  • middlewoman — The female equivalent of a middleman; a female intermediary.
  • middlewomen — Plural form of middlewoman.
  • mince words — speak tentatively, tactfully
  • mind-blower — a hallucinogenic drug.
  • mineworkers — Plural form of mineworker.
  • money cowry — a tropical marine gastropod, Cypraea moneta
  • money wages — wages evaluated with reference to the money paid rather than the equivalent purchasing power
  • moonflowers — Plural form of moonflower.
  • mounds view — a town in E Minnesota.
  • narrow seas — the channels between Great Britain and the Continent and Great Britain and Ireland
  • nation-wide — extending throughout the nation: The incident aroused nationwide interest.
  • needlewoman — a woman who does needlework.
  • needlewomen — Plural form of needlewoman.
  • netherworld — the infernal regions; hell.
  • new bedford — a seaport in SE Massachusetts: formerly a chief whaling port.
  • new biology — the branch of biology that deals with the nature of biological phenomena at the molecular level through the study of DNA and RNA, proteins, and other macromolecules involved in genetic information and cell function, characteristically making use of advanced tools and techniques of separation, manipulation, imaging, and analysis.
  • new country — a style of country music that emerged in the late 1980s characterized by a more contemporary sound and down-to-earth rather than sentimental lyrics
  • new economy — the postindustrial world economy based on internet trading and advanced technology
  • new flavors — An object-oriented Lisp from Symbolics, the successor to Flavors, it led to CLOS.
  • new georgia — a group of islands in the Solomon Islands.
  • new glasgow — a city in N central Nova Scotia, in E Canada.
  • new harmony — a town in SW Indiana: socialistic community established by Robert Owen 1825.
  • new kingdom — a period of Egyptian history, extending from the 18th to the 20th dynasty (?1570–?1080 bc)
  • new milford — a town in W Connecticut.
  • new orleans — a seaport in SE Louisiana, on the Mississippi: British defeated (1815) by Americans under Andrew Jackson.
  • new thought — a system of doctrine and practice originating in the 19th century and stressing the power of thought to control physical and mental events.
  • new yorkese — the speech thought to be characteristic of a person from New York City, as in pronunciation or vocabulary.
  • new-for-old — (of insurance) issued on the principle that claims will be based on the cost of replacing old damaged, destroyed, or lost items with brand new items
  • newburyport — a city in NE Massachusetts.
  • news editor — a person who is in charge of the news desk at a newspaper or broadcasting organization and whose job is to oversee the selection and preparation of news items for publication or broadcast
  • news vendor — a person who sells newspapers or periodicals.
  • newsmongers — Plural form of newsmonger.
  • newspersons — Plural form of newsperson.
  • newsvendors — Plural form of newsvendor.
  • nippleworts — Plural form of nipplewort.
  • non-renewal — the act of renewing.
  • nonwashable — Not washable.
  • nonwindowed — Not windowed: without windows, windowless.
  • northwester — New England and South Atlantic States. a wind or gale from the northwest.
  • norway pine — red pine.
  • number work — simple arithmetic and similar mathematical procedures as used and studied at primary level
  • olive brown — a dull yellowish-brown to yellowish-green colour
  • olive crown — (esp in ancient Greece and Rome) a garland of olive leaves awarded as a token of victory
  • ombudswomen — Plural form of ombudswoman.
  • on a downer — If you are on a downer, you are feeling depressed and without hope.
  • on the town — a thickly populated area, usually smaller than a city and larger than a village, having fixed boundaries and certain local powers of government.
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