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12-letter words containing r, e, w, o, k

  • servile work — work of a physical nature that is forbidden on Sundays and on certain holidays
  • sewage works — a place where chemicals are used to clean sewage so that it can then be allowed to go into rivers, etc or used to make manure
  • shift worker — a person who does shiftwork
  • star network — a circuit with three or more branches all of which have one common terminal.
  • streetworker — a social worker who works with youths of a neighborhood.
  • trickle-down — of, relating to, or based on the trickle-down theory: the trickle-down benefits to the local community.
  • turkey brown — an angler's name for a species of mayfly, Paraleptophlebia submarginata
  • wakeboarding — (sports) A water sport where a rider on a small board is towed by a motor boat, and attached by a cable.
  • walker hound — an American foxhound having a black, tan, and white, or, sometimes, a tan and white coat.
  • water pocket — a cavity at the foot of a cliff formed by the falling action of an intermittent stream.
  • water worker — a person employed in the water industry
  • water-locked — enclosed entirely, or almost entirely, by water: a waterlocked nation.
  • weathercocks — Plural form of weathercock.
  • weavers-knot — sheet bend.
  • welfare work — the efforts or programs of an agency, community, business organization, etc., to improve living conditions, increase job opportunities, secure hospitalization, and the like, for needy persons within its jurisdiction.
  • whiskey sour — a cocktail made with whiskey, lemon juice, and sugar.
  • wonderstruck — (of a person) experiencing a sudden feeling of awed delight or wonder.
  • wonderworker — A person who performs miracles or wonders.
  • woodruff key — a key having the form of a nearly semicircular disk fitting into a recess in a shaft.
  • work surface — A work surface is a flat surface, usually in a kitchen, which is easy to clean and on which you can do things such as prepare food.
  • work to rule — If workers work to rule, they protest by working according to the rules of their job without doing any extra work or taking any new decisions.
  • work wonders — have a transforming effect
  • work-release — of or relating to a program under which prisoners may work outside of prison while serving their sentences.
  • workableness — The quality or state of being workable, or the extent to which a thing is workable.
  • working week — A working week is the amount of time during a normal week that you spend doing your job.
  • workingwomen — a woman who is regularly employed.
  • worklessness — (British) Unemployment; the state of being without paid work.
  • workmistress — a woman who oversees or controls work
  • world-shaker — something of sufficient importance to affect the entire world: The book is no world-shaker, but it's pleasant reading.
  • worried sick — extremely anxious about sb or sth
  • youth worker — A youth worker is a person whose job involves providing support and social activities for young people, especially young people from poor backgrounds.
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