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18-letter words containing p, o, w, e, r

  • software backplane — (programming, tool)   A CASE framework from Atherton.
  • spike-tooth harrow — a harrow equipped with straight teeth on horizontal bars, usually employed to smooth and level plowed soil or seedbeds for planting or sowing.
  • spread one's wings — to make full use of one's abilities
  • take the wraps off — to reveal
  • the operative word — If you describe a word as the operative word, you want to draw attention to it because you think it is important or exactly true in a particular situation.
  • the powers that be — You can refer to people in authority as the powers that be, especially when you want to say that you disagree with them or do not understand what they say or do.
  • to sweep the board — If someone sweeps the board in a competition or election, they win nearly everything that it is possible to win.
  • to watch your step — If someone tells you to watch your step, they are warning you to be careful about how you behave or what you say so that you do not get into trouble.
  • traditional weapon — a weapon having ceremonial tribal significance, such as an assegai or knobkerrie
  • two-colour process — (in early colour photography) a method of printing which uses superimposed red and green images
  • warehouse capacity — the amount of storage space in a warehouse
  • western isles pony — a breed of large pony, typically grey, with a dense waterproof coat. The only surviving variety is the Eriskay pony
  • white iron pyrites — marcasite
  • wild passionflower — the maypop, Passiflora incarnata.
  • wildlife programme — (esp on television) a documentary whose subject is wild animals in their natural habitat or undomesticated fauna and flora generally
  • wilson's phalarope — a phalarope, Phalaropus tricolor, that breeds in the prairie regions of North America and winters in Argentina and Chile.
  • wireless telephone — Now Rare. radiotelephony.
  • wireless telephony — Now Rare. radiotelephony.
  • women at point sur — a narrative poem (1927) by Robinson Jeffers.
  • working hypothesis — See under hypothesis (def 1).
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