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

  • townspeople — residents of a town
  • two a penny — Things that are said to be two a penny or ten a penny are not valuable or interesting because they are very common and easy to find.
  • two-pointer — a shot from inside or on the three point line, worth two points if it is made
  • unempowered — to give power or authority to; authorize, especially by legal or official means: I empowered my agent to make the deal for me. The local ordinance empowers the board of health to close unsanitary restaurants.
  • upside down — with the upper part undermost.
  • vowel point — any of a group of auxiliary symbols, as small lines and dots, placed above or below consonant symbols to indicate vowels in a writing system, as that of Hebrew or Arabic, in which vowels are otherwise not written.
  • walden pond — a pond in NE Massachusetts, near Concord: site of Thoreau's cottage and inspiration for his book Walden, or Life in the Woods.
  • well-proven — to establish the truth or genuineness of, as by evidence or argument: to prove one's claim.
  • well-spoken — speaking well, fittingly, or pleasingly: The new chairwoman was very well-spoken.
  • whole snipe — the common snipe. See under snipe (def 1).
  • windom peak — a mountain in SW Colorado, in the San Juan Mountains. 14,082 feet (4292 meters).
  • windowpanes — Plural form of windowpane.
  • witherspoonJohn, 1723–94, U.S. theologian and statesman, born in Scotland.
  • wood pigeon — Also called ringdove. a European pigeon, Columba palumbus, having a whitish patch on each side of the neck.
  • wool sponge — a commercial sponge, Hippiospongia lachne, of Florida and the West Indies, the surface of which resembles the fleece of a sheep.
  • yellow pine — any of several North American pines yielding a strong, yellowish wood.
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