10-letter words containing t, o, w
- ghost-weed — snow-on-the-mountain.
- ghostwrite — (intransitive) To write under the name of another (especially literary works).
- glowsticks — Plural form of glowstick.
- go in with — share cost
- go to town — a thickly populated area, usually smaller than a city and larger than a village, having fixed boundaries and certain local powers of government.
- go towards — If an amount of money goes towards something, it is used to pay part of the cost of that thing.
- go without — be deprived of, not have
- go-between — a person who acts as an agent or intermediary between persons or groups; emissary.
- great worm — Internet Worm
- greatsword — Any generally straight bladed double edged sword large enough that it required the use of two hands to wield it effectively.
- grow apart — friends: become less intimate
- grow light — a fluorescent light bulb designed to emit light of a wavelength conducive to plant growth.
- grunt work — work that is repetitious, often physically exhausting, and boring.
- hagerstown — a city in NW Maryland.
- hand towel — small towel for drying the hands
- harmsworth — Alfred Charles William, Viscount Northcliffe, 1865–1922, English journalist, publisher, and politician.
- hateworthy — Worthy of being hated, detestable, despicable.
- heartworms — Plural form of heartworm.
- herskowitz — Melville (Jean) 1895–1963, American anthropologist.
- hold water — a transparent, odorless, tasteless liquid, a compound of hydrogen and oxygen, H 2 O, freezing at 32°F or 0°C and boiling at 212°F or 100°C, that in a more or less impure state constitutes rain, oceans, lakes, rivers, etc.: it contains 11.188 percent hydrogen and 88.812 percent oxygen, by weight.
- hollow out — make hollow, scoop out
- holy water — water blessed by a priest.
- hot switch — a rapid transfer from one point of origin to another during a broadcast.
- hot-walker — a person whose job is walking racehorses after races, workouts, etc. to allow them to cool off gradually
- hotel work — any of various jobs required in a hotel, such as receptionists, waiters, etc
- how's that — If you say 'How's that?' to someone, you are asking whether something is acceptable or satisfactory.
- huntiegowk — a fool's errand or a person sent on an April fool's errand
- huntswoman — Feminine form of huntsman.
- huntswomen — Plural form of huntswoman.
- intergrown — That have grown together and through each other.
- interworld — A world between other worlds.
- interwoven — to weave together, as threads, strands, branches, or roots.
- jack towel — a long towel with the ends sewed together, for hanging on a roller.
- jobsworths — Plural form of jobsworth.
- jointworms — Plural form of jointworm.
- kenilworth — a town in central Warwickshire, in central England, SE of Birmingham.
- kept woman — a woman maintained by a man as his mistress
- kidneywort — the navelwort, Umbilicus rupestris, of the stonecrop family, having drooping yellowish-green flowers.
- kiwisports — a fitness programme developed for schools, involving a selection of sports such as rounders, cricket, and netball
- knockwurst — knackwurst.
- lake worth — a city in SE Florida.
- law courts — a body which adjudicates legal disputes and attempts to administer justice in accordance with the law
- left arrow — (character) The graphic which the 1963 version of ASCII had in place of the underscore character, ASCII 95.
- letchworth — a town in SE England, in N Hertfordshire: the first garden city in Great Britain (founded in 1903). Pop: 32 932 (2001)
- letterwood — snakewood.
- lewis bolt — an anchor bolt having a conical base around which concrete or lead is poured to hold it.
- light show — a form of entertainment consisting chiefly of constantly changing patterns of light and color, usually accompanied by music and sound effects.
- linlithgow — former name of West Lothian.
- little owl — a small, European owl, Athene noctua, often portrayed in art with the goddess Athena.
- littlewood — (Maud) Joan. 1914–2002, British theatre director, who founded the Theatre Workshop Company (1945) with the aim of bringing theatre to the working classes: noted esp for her production of Oh, What a Lovely War! (1963)