10-letter words containing w, a, g
- snow gauge — an instrument for measuring the depth of snow.
- snow grass — any of various grey-green grasses of the genus Poa, of SE Australian mountain regions
- snowmaking — the creation of artificial snow at ski areas.
- spongeware — earthenware decorated with color applied with a sponge.
- stage wait — an unintentional pause during a performance, usually caused by a performer's or stagehand's missing a cue.
- stewarding — a person who manages another's property or financial affairs; one who administers anything as the agent of another or others.
- sugar bowl — a small bowl, usually having a cover, for serving granulated sugar or sugar cubes.
- swaggering — pertaining to, characteristic of, or behaving in the manner of a person who swaggers.
- sweet flag — an aroid marsh plant, Acorus calamus, having swordlike leaves, small greenish flowers, and aromatic roots
- sweet gale — a shrub, Myrica gale, of northern swamp regions, having yellow catkin-like flowers and aromatic leaves: family Myricaceae
- swing band — a band that plays swing jazz
- swing loan — a bridge loan.
- swing pass — a pass thrown to a receiver, usually a running back, who is running toward a sideline
- swinglebar — a whiffletree.
- switchgear — switching equipment used in an electric power station.
- swung dash — a mark of punctuation (∼) used in place of a word or part of a word previously spelled out.
- tanglewood — a town in W Massachusetts, in the Berkshire Hills: a former estate (Tanglewood) in the area is the site of annual summer music festivals.
- tank wagon — a form of railway wagon carrying a tank for the transport of liquids
- tegakwitha — Tekakwitha
- tepe gawra — an archaeological site in N Iraq, near Mosul: excavations have revealed that numerous settlements have occupied this site since c5000 b.c.
- thoughtway — a habitual manner of thought in a particular group of people.
- throughway — a limited-access toll highway providing a means of direct transportation between distant areas for high-speed automobile traffic.
- tug of war — an athletic contest between two teams at opposite ends of a rope, each team trying to drag the other over a line.
- tug-of-war — an athletic contest between two teams at opposite ends of a rope, each team trying to drag the other over a line.
- twangingly — in a twanging manner
- two-bagger — two-base hit.
- unwavering — to sway to and fro; flutter: Foliage wavers in the breeze.
- unwearying — not causing weariness
- waddington — Mount, a mountain in SW British Columbia, Canada: highest peak of the Coast Mountains. 13,104 feet (3994 meters).
- 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 boss — a man in charge of a wagon train.
- wagon roof — barrel vault.
- wagon seat — a plain, unupholstered settee, usually with a slat back, for use either indoors or in a wagon.
- wagonettes — Plural form of wagonette.
- wagonloads — Plural form of wagonload.
- wainwright — Jonathan Mayhew [mey-hyoo] /ˈmeɪ hyu/ (Show IPA), 1883–1953, U.S. general.
- waist-high — extending as high as the waist: a waist-high hedge.
- waldenburg — German name of Wałbrzych.
- waldgraves — Plural form of waldgrave.
- wall light — lamp set into or hung from a wall
- 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
- wallington — a town in NE New Jersey.