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11-letter words containing w, a, r, d, o

  • forwardmost — all the way at the front; first.
  • forwardness — overreadiness to push oneself forward; lack of appropriate modesty; presumption; boldness.
  • frankenword — (neologism) A word formed by combining two (or more) other words; a portmanteau.
  • frowardness — The quality of being froward.
  • grass widow — a woman who is separated, divorced, or lives apart from her husband.
  • greasewoods — Plural form of greasewood.
  • great world — fashionable society and its way of life
  • ground wave — a radio wave that propagates on or near the earth's surface and is affected by the ground and the troposphere.
  • groundwater — the water beneath the surface of the ground, consisting largely of surface water that has seeped down: the source of water in springs and wells.
  • guardswoman — A female guardsman.
  • guardswomen — Plural form of guardswoman.
  • hammer down — a tool consisting of a solid head, usually of metal, set crosswise on a handle, used for beating metals, driving nails, etc.
  • hand-worker — a person who does handwork
  • handbarrows — Plural form of handbarrow.
  • handwrought — formed or shaped by hand, as metal objects.
  • hardworking — industrious; zealous: a hardworking family man.
  • horse-drawn — A horse-drawn carriage, cart, or other vehicle is one that is pulled by one or more horses.
  • howard mossHoward, 1922–1987, U.S. poet, editor, and playwright.
  • id software — (games)   Creators and publishers of the DOOM game for IBM PCs. E-mail: <[email protected]>. Telephone: +1 800-ID-GAMES (Orders only).
  • jawdropping — Alternative form of jaw-dropping.
  • labour ward — a ward or department of a hospital for the care and admission of women in the process of childbirth
  • land worker — a person who works on the land
  • leatherwood — an American shrub, Dirca palustris, having a tough bark.
  • meadow bird — the bobolink.
  • meadowlarks — Plural form of meadowlark.
  • narrow down — refine, limit
  • northwardly — Northwards, towards the north.
  • on a downer — If you are on a downer, you are feeling depressed and without hope.
  • outwardness — (uncountable) The quality of being outward.
  • overdrawing — Present participle of overdraw.
  • overforward — too familiar
  • paddle worm — any of a family of green-blue faintly iridescent active marine polychaete worms of the genus Phyllodoce, having paddle-shaped swimming lobes, found under stones on the shore
  • pedal power — use of a cycle
  • powder flag — red flag (def 4).
  • power ahead — If an economy or company powers ahead, it becomes stronger and more successful.
  • power brand — a brand of product that is a household name associated with a successful company
  • powerdomain — (theory)   The powerdomain of a domain D is a domain containing some of the subsets of D. Due to the asymmetry condition in the definition of a partial order (and therefore of a domain) the powerdomain cannot contain all the subsets of D. This is because there may be different sets X and Y such that X <= Y and Y <= X which, by the asymmetry condition would have to be considered equal. There are at least three possible orderings of the subsets of a powerdomain: Egli-Milner: X <= Y iff for all x in X, exists y in Y: x <= y and for all y in Y, exists x in X: x <= y ("The other domain always contains a related element"). Hoare or Partial Correctness or Safety: X <= Y iff for all x in X, exists y in Y: x <= y ("The bigger domain always contains a bigger element"). Smyth or Total Correctness or Liveness: X <= Y iff for all y in Y, exists x in X: x <= y ("The smaller domain always contains a smaller element"). If a powerdomain represents the result of an abstract interpretation in which a bigger value is a safe approximation to a smaller value then the Hoare powerdomain is appropriate because the safe approximation Y to the powerdomain X contains a safe approximation to each point in X. ("<=" is written in LaTeX as \sqsubseteq).
  • put forward — to move or place (anything) so as to get it into or out of a specific location or position: to put a book on the shelf.
  • radio waves — an electromagnetic wave having a wavelength between 1 millimeter and 30,000 meters, or a frequency between 10 kilohertz and 300,000 megahertz.
  • rain shadow — a region in the lee of mountains that receives less rainfall than the region windward of the mountains.
  • random walk — Statistics. the path taken by a point or quantity that moves in steps, where the direction of each step is determined randomly.
  • rear window — the window at the back of a motor vehicle
  • schoolwards — in the direction of school
  • set forward — to put (something or someone) in a particular place: to set a vase on a table.
  • shade-grown — grown in the shade, especially in artificial shade, as under a cloth.
  • shadow roll — sheepskin that is placed just below the eyes of a pacing horse in order to prevent it from seeing moving shadows cast by its body.
  • shadowgraph — a picture produced by throwing a shadow, as of the hands, on a lighted screen, wall, or the like.
  • show around — guide round a new place
  • shower head — nozzle of a shower attachment
  • soap powder — soap produced and packaged in powdered form.
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