10-letter words containing w, a, g, e
- two-bagger — two-base hit.
- unwavering — to sway to and fro; flutter: Foliage wavers in the breeze.
- unwearying — not causing weariness
- wage claim — the wage demanded from management for workers by their union representatives
- wage drift — the change in the amount by which actual earnings exceed negotiated earnings
- wage rates — rates of pay based on per unit of production or per period of worktime on the job
- wage scale — a schedule of wages paid workers performing related tasks in an industry or shop.
- wage slave — a person who works for a wage, especially with total and immediate dependency on the income derived from such labor.
- wages bill — the total amount of money that a company or organization pays to its employees
- wages slip — a small piece of paper with a printed record of a person's wages
- wageworker — a member of the laboring class; wage earner.
- wagner act — National Labor Relations Act.
- wagon seat — a plain, unupholstered settee, usually with a slat back, for use either indoors or in a wagon.
- wagonettes — Plural form of wagonette.
- waldenburg — German name of Wałbrzych.
- waldgraves — Plural form of waldgrave.
- wallenberg — Raoul (raʊl). 1912–?, Swedish diplomat, who helped (1944–45) thousands of Hungarian Jews to escape from the Nazis. After his arrest (1945) by the Soviets nothing is certainly known of him; despite claims that he is still alive he is presumed to have died in prison
- wampumpeag — wampum.
- wanderings — Plural form of wandering.
- ward eight — a mixed drink containing whiskey, lemon juice, grenadine, and often soda water, served in a tall glass with crushed ice and sometimes garnished with an orange slice and a cherry.
- warfighter — A soldier in combat.
- warmongers — Plural form of warmonger.
- waste gate — a valve in a turbocharger unit that automatically opens when a predetermined engine speed is reached, so that some of the exhaust gas to the turbine is diverted and the engine speed does not become excessive.
- water flag — a European iris, Iris pseudacorus, naturalized throughout eastern North America, with blue-green leaves and violet-veined, yellow flowers and growing in moist places.
- water gate — a gate for halting or controlling the flow of water in a watercourse; floodgate.
- water plug — a fireplug; hydrant.
- water sign — any of the three astrological signs, Cancer, Scorpio, and Pisces, that are grouped together because of the shared attributes of sensitivity and emotionalism.
- watertight — constructed or fitted so tightly as to be impervious to water: The ship had six watertight compartments.
- waveguides — Plural form of waveguide.
- wavelength — Physics. the distance, measured in the direction of propagation of a wave, between two successive points in the wave that are characterized by the same phase of oscillation.
- waveringly — to sway to and fro; flutter: Foliage wavers in the breeze.
- weapon dog — a dog, esp. a bulldog or pit bull terrier, kept as a pet and trained to intimidate and attack others
- wearyingly — In a wearying way.
- weaselling — (British) present participle of weasel.
- weathering — the state of the atmosphere with respect to wind, temperature, cloudiness, moisture, pressure, etc.
- webcasting — the broadcasting of news, entertainment, etc., using the Internet, specifically the World Wide Web.
- weighboard — a thin layer (e.g. shale or clay) between bands of thicker strata (e.g. limestone or sandstone)
- weight man — a person whose work is to weigh goods or merchandise.
- werejaguar — (fiction, mythology) A shapeshifter who can assume the form of a jaguar.
- west fargo — a city in SE North Dakota: suburb of Fargo.
- wharfinger — a person who owns or has charge of a wharf.
- what goes? — what's happening?
- wheat germ — the embryo or nucleus of the wheat kernel, used in or on foods as a concentrated source of vitamins.
- wheatgrass — any of several wheatlike grasses of the genus Agropyron, grown for forage in the western U.S.
- whiggamore — one of a group of 17th-century Scottish insurgents
- white flag — an all-white banner or piece of cloth, used as a symbol of surrender or truce.
- white sage — Also called greasewood. a shrubby plant, Salvia apiana, of the mint family, native to southern California, having white, hairy foliage and spikes of white or pale lavender flowers.
- whole gale — a wind of 55–63 miles per hour (24–28 m/sec).
- wholegrain — A cereal grain that contains cereal germ, endosperm, and bran, in contrast to refined grains, which retain only the endosperm.
- wide-angle — of or relating to a lens having a relatively wide angle of view, generally 45° or more, and a focal length of less than 50 mm.