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10-letter words containing w, a, i, t, n

  • twickenham — a former borough, now part of Richmond upon Thames, in SE England.
  • twin falls — a city in S Idaho.
  • twin peaks — a mountain in central Idaho: highest peak in the Salmon River Mountains. 10,340 feet (3154 meters).
  • twin-track — involving two simultaneous actions or processes
  • underwaist — a blouse worn under another.
  • united way — a nationwide civic organization (United Way of America) or any of its affiliated local groups that raise funds through individual contributions and allocate them to benefit civic and charitable programs and organizations, as the YMCA and Red Cross. Formerly Community Chests and Councils of America, United Community Funds and Councils of America.
  • waddingtonMount, a mountain in SW British Columbia, Canada: highest peak of the Coast Mountains. 13,104 feet (3994 meters).
  • wafer-thin — very thin: a wafer-thin slice.
  • wainscoted — Alternative spelling of wainscotted.
  • wainwright — Jonathan Mayhew [mey-hyoo] /ˈmeɪ hyu/ (Show IPA), 1883–1953, U.S. general.
  • waistbands — Plural form of waistband.
  • waistlines — Plural form of waistline.
  • waitperson — a waiter or waitress.
  • wallington — a town in NE New Jersey.
  • walnut oil — oil obtained from walnuts
  • wanthriven — poorly developed or undersized
  • wanting in — deficient in
  • warrantied — an act or an instance of warranting; assurance; authorization; warrant.
  • warranties — Plural form of warranty.
  • warranting — authorization, sanction, or justification.
  • warrantise — a warranty; security
  • warrantize — to guarantee the security of (land) to a person
  • warrington — a city in Cheshire, in NW England, on the Mersey River.
  • washington — Booker T(aliaferro) [boo k-er tol-uh-ver] /ˈbʊk ər ˈtɒl ə vər/ (Show IPA), 1856–1915, U.S. reformer, educator, author, and lecturer.
  • watchnight — Alternative form of watch night.
  • water line — Nautical. the part of the outside of a ship's hull that is just at the water level.
  • water main — a main pipe or conduit in a system for conveying water.
  • water mint — a Eurasian mint plant, Mentha aquatica, of marshy places, having scented leaves and whorls of small flowers
  • 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.
  • water-inch — the quantity of water (approx. 500 cubic feet) discharged in 24 hours through a circular opening of one inch diameter leading from a reservoir in which the water is constantly only high enough to cover the orifice.
  • waterbrain — gid, in sheep.
  • wateriness — the state or condition of being watery or diluted.
  • wave train — a series of successive waves spaced at regular intervals.
  • wax insect — any of several scale insects that secrete a commercially valuable waxy substance, especially a Chinese scale insect, Ericerus pe-la.
  • waziristan — a mountainous region in NW Pakistan.
  • weak point — an area of weakness
  • 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.
  • websterian — pertaining to or characteristic of Daniel Webster, his political theories, or his oratory.
  • weight man — a person whose work is to weigh goods or merchandise.
  • west irian — a former name of Irian Jaya.
  • whitmonday — the Monday following Whitsunday.
  • whitsunday — the seventh Sunday after Easter, celebrated as a festival in commemoration of the descent of the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost.
  • wiesenthalSimon, 1908–2005, Austrian Holocaust survivor and hunter of Nazi war criminals.
  • wind plant — a grouping of devices, consisting of a tower, propellers, alternator, generator, and storage batteries, designed to produce electricity by converting the mechanical force of wind on blades or a rotor into electricity.
  • wind shaft — the shaft driven by the sails of a windmill.
  • window tax — a tax on windows in houses levied between 1696 and 1851
  • winetaster — a critic, writer, buyer, or other professional who tests the quality of wine by tasting.
  • winlestrae — windlestraw.
  • winstanley — Gerrard. ?1609–60, English radical; leader of the Diggers (1649–50) and author of the pamphlet The Law of Freedom in a Platform (1652)
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