10-letter words containing w, a, n
- man-of-war — a warship.
- maned wolf — a South American wild dog, Chrysocyon jubatus, having a shaggy, reddish coat and long ears and legs: now reduced in number.
- mankiewicz — Joseph L(eo) 1909–1993, U.S. motion-picture director, producer, and writer.
- mark twain — Roger (William Roger Clemens"The Rocket") born 1962, U.S. baseball pitcher.
- markswoman — a woman skilled in shooting at a mark; a woman who shoots well.
- markswomen — Plural form of markswoman.
- marrowbone — A bone containing edible marrow.
- mars brown — a medium brown color.
- marsh wren — Also called long-billed marsh wren. a North American wren, Cistothorus palustris, that inhabits tall reed beds.
- mason wasp — any of several solitary wasps, as Rygchium dorsale, that construct nests of mud or clay.
- mawlamyine — Moulmein.
- meadowland — an area or section of land that is a meadow or is used or kept as a meadow.
- meat wagon — an ambulance.
- meganewton — a unit of force equal to one million newtons
- men's wear — apparel and accessories for men.
- miswandred — having strayed or become lost or gone off course
- montan wax — hard wax obtained from lignite and peat
- moonwalked — Simple past tense and past participle of moonwalk.
- moonwalker — One who moonwalks; an astronaut who has walked on the moon.
- morgantown — a city in N West Virginia.
- nameworthy — worthy of or deserving a name
- narrowback — a person of slight build who is unfit for hard labor.
- narrowband — Of or involving signals over a narrow range of frequencies.
- narrowboat — A canal boat less than 7 feet (2.1 m) wide with a maximum length of 70 feet (21.3 m) and steered with a tiller rather than a wheel.
- narrowbody — (aeronautics) An airliner capable of seating six or less passengers in a single row of economy seating, with one aisle.
- narrowcast — to aim a program or programming at a specific, limited audience or sales market.
- narrowhead — Applied to various kinds of animals with a narrow head.
- narrowness — of little breadth or width; not broad or wide; not as wide as usual or expected: a narrow path.
- nationwide — extending throughout the nation: The incident aroused nationwide interest.
- navelworts — Plural form of navelwort.
- nearly new — Nearly new items are items for sale that have belonged to another person but have not been used much and are still in very good condition. A nearly new shop sells nearly new items.
- netherward — bottom-most, lowest
- new albany — a city in S Indiana, on the Ohio River.
- new canaan — a town in SW Connecticut.
- new candle — candela
- new castle — a city in W Pennsylvania.
- new france — the French colonies and possessions in North America up to 1763.
- new guinea — a large island N of Australia, politically divided into the Indonesian province of Irian Jaya (West Irian) and the independent country of Papua New Guinea. About 316,000 sq. mi. (818,000 sq. km).
- new iberia — a city in S Louisiana.
- new labour — a rebranding of the British Labour Party and its policies undertaken by Tony Blair and his supporters in the run-up to the 1997 general election in Great Britain and maintained during the Labour Party's period of government under Blair's premiership. Never an official title, it denotes the more right-wing/social democratic trend in Labour thinking and policy intended to make the party electable after its electoral catastrophes of the 1980s
- new potato — a variety of potato that is intended to be harvested and eaten during the summer while the individual potatoes are still comparatively small
- new year's — the year approaching or newly begun.
- new-collar — pertaining to or designating middle-class wage earners holding jobs in a service industry.
- newark bay — a bay in NE New Jersey. 6 miles (10 km) long; 1 mile (1.6 km) wide.
- newby hall — a mansion near Ripon in Yorkshire: built in 1705 and altered (1770–76) by Robert Adam
- newfangled — of a new kind or fashion: newfangled ideas.
- news agent — newsdealer
- news flash — flash (def 6).
- news media — media1 (def 2).
- news value — newsworthiness; value in terms of its interest to consumers of published or broadcast news