9-letter words containing t, w, a
- towelhead — an offensive term for someone who wears a turban
- towheaded — a head of very light blond, almost white hair.
- town hall — a hall or building belonging to a town, used for the transaction of the town's business and often also as a place of public assembly.
- town plan — a comprehensive document which sets out a vision of the physical and social development of a town, including the construction of facilities
- town talk — the usual talk, gossip, or rumors, as in a village or town.
- townscape — a scene or view, either pictorial or natural, of a town or city.
- trade war — an economic conflict in which countries impose import restrictions on each other in order to harm each other's trade
- tree lawn — a strip of grass-covered ground between sidewalk and curb, often planted with shade trees.
- treenware — household utensils, dishes, etc., made entirely of wood.
- trelawney — Edward John, 1792–1881, English adventurer and author.
- trialware — computer software that can be used free of charge for a limited evaluation period
- trim away — If you trim away or trim off parts of something, you cut them off, because they are not needed.
- tuck away — to put into a small, close, or concealing place: Tuck the money into your wallet.
- turn away — move further from sth, sb
- twalpenny — a Scots shilling
- twayblade — any of various orchids, especially of the genera Listera and Liparis, characterized by two nearly opposite broad leaves.
- tweeddale — Peebles.
- tweenager — a child of approximately eight to fourteen years of age
- tweetable — short enough to be posted on the Twitter website
- two-a-cat — two old cat.
- two-faced — having two faces.
- two-party — (of a political system) dominated by two major political parties
- two-phase — diphase.
- two-track — an oblique movement of a horse in which the forehand and hindquarters move on two distinct parallel tracks and the body is maintained uniformly in the direction of the movement.
- ullswater — a lake in NW England, in Cumbria in the Lake District. Length: 12 km (7.5 miles)
- ultraslow — extremely slow
- ultrawide — extremely wide
- unwasting — not wasting; not diminishing or decaying
- unwatched — to be alertly on the lookout, look attentively, or observe, as to see what comes, is done, or happens: to watch while an experiment is performed.
- unwealthy — having great wealth; rich; affluent: a wealthy person; a wealthy nation.
- unwreathe — to bring out of a wreathed condition; untwist; untwine.
- wadsetter — a person who takes out a mortgage
- wadsworth — a city in N Ohio.
- waghalter — a person likely to be hanged
- wagon-lit — (in continental European usage) a railroad sleeping car.
- wagonette — a light, four-wheeled carriage, with or without a top, having a crosswise seat in front and two lengthwise seats facing each other at the back.
- wahpekute — a member of a North American Indian people belonging to the Santee branch of the Dakota.
- wainscots — Plural form of wainscot.
- waist bag — a bag that fastens around the waist
- waistband — a band encircling the waist, especially as a part of a skirt or pair of trousers.
- waistbelt — a belt encircling the waist
- waistcoat — Chiefly British. vest (def 1).
- waistline — the circumference of the body at the waist: exercises to reduce the waistline.
- waiterage — the discharging of waiter duties
- waitering — a person, especially a man, who waits on tables, as in a restaurant.
- waitingly — in a waiting manner
- waitstaff — a staff of waiters or waitresses who wait on tables, as in a restaurant.
- wakamatsu — a seaport on N Kyushu, in S Japan: formed in 1963 by the merger of five cities (Kokura, Moji, Tobata, Wakamatsu, and Yawata)
- waldflute — an organ flute stop
- walk into — If you walk into an unpleasant situation, you become involved in it without expecting to, especially because you have been careless.