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9-letter words containing t, w, e, o, h

  • sweetshop — a shop solely or largely selling sweets, esp boiled sweets
  • tent show — an exhibition or performance, especially a circus, presented in a tent.
  • the crowd — the common people; the masses
  • the gower — a peninsula in S Wales, in Swansea county on the Bristol Channel: mainly agricultural with several resorts
  • the sword — violence, warfare
  • the wagon — Charles's Wain
  • the wolds — a range of chalk hills in NE England: consists of the Yorkshire Wolds to the north, separated from the Lincolnshire Wolds by the Humber estuary
  • the woman — feminine nature or feelings
  • the works — exertion or effort directed to produce or accomplish something; labor; toil.
  • the worst — the least good or most inferior person, thing, or part in a group, narrative, etc
  • the-downs — a range of low ridges in S and SW England.
  • throwover — designed to fit loosely over an object without being tied to it
  • throwster — a person who throws silk or synthetic filaments.
  • towelhead — an offensive term for someone who wears a turban
  • towheaded — a head of very light blond, almost white hair.
  • townhouse — a house in the city, especially as distinguished from a house in the country owned by the same person.
  • townshendCharles, 1725–67, English politician, chancellor of the exchequer for whom the Townshend Acts are named.
  • two-horse — If you describe a contest as a two-horse race, you mean that only two of the people or things taking part have any chance of winning.
  • two-phase — diphase.
  • water hog — a person who uses water selfishly or irresponsibly, esp during a water shortage
  • waterhole — A depression in which water collects, especially one from which animals regularly drink.
  • wave moth — any of several small geometrid moths with wavy markings, such as the common wave (Deilinia exanthemata), with grey-marked wings, and the lighter common white wave (D. pusaria)
  • weigh out — If you weigh something out, you measure a certain weight of it in order to make sure that you have the correct amount.
  • wentworthThomas, 1st Earl of Strafford, Strafford, 1st Earl of.
  • west goth — a Visigoth.
  • whaleboat — a long, narrow boat designed for quick turning and use in rough seas: formerly used in whaling, now mainly for sea rescue.
  • wheatworm — a small nematode, Tylenchus tritici, that stunts growth and disrupts seed production in wheat.
  • whereinto — Into which.
  • whereunto — (archaic or formal, interrogative) unto what; to what purpose.
  • whetstone — a stone for sharpening cutlery or tools by friction.
  • whinstone — Chiefly British. any of the dark-colored, fine-grained rocks, especially igneous rocks, as dolerite and basalt.
  • white fox — Arctic fox.
  • white oak — a town in central Maryland, near Washington, D.C.
  • white out — of the color of pure snow, of the margins of this page, etc.; reflecting nearly all the rays of sunlight or a similar light.
  • white owl — snowy owl
  • white rot — a decay of wood caused by lignase-producing fungi, especially Phanerochaete chrysosporium.
  • white-hot — extremely hot.
  • whiteboys — a secret agrarian peasant organization, active in Ireland during the early 1760s, whose members wore white shirts for recognition on their night raids to destroy crops, barns, and other property in redressing grievances against landlords and protesting the paying of tithes.
  • whitecoat — a baby seal, usually less than four weeks old and still having its initial white fur.
  • whitecomb — a fungal disease infecting the combs of certain fowls
  • whiteouts — Plural form of whiteout.
  • whitewood — any of numerous trees, as the tulip tree or the linden, yielding a white or light-colored wood.
  • wholetime — full-time.
  • wirephoto — a device for transmitting photographs over distances by wire. a photograph so transmitted.
  • withe rod — either of two North American viburnums, Viburnum cassinoides or V. nudum, having tough, osierlike shoots.
  • worksheet — a sheet of paper on which work schedules, working time, special instructions, etc., are recorded.
  • worthiest — Superlative form of worthy.
  • worthless — without worth; of no use, importance, or value; good-for-nothing: a worthless person; a worthless contract.
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