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10-letter words containing w, a, r, k

  • freak show — a display of people or animals with unusual or grotesque physical features, as at a circus or carnival sideshow.
  • gas worker — a gas engineer
  • glassworks — a factory where glass is made.
  • grasswrack — any of several perennial submerged marine plants of the genus Zostera; eelgrass
  • great week — Holy Week.
  • hillwalker — a person who goes hillwalking
  • hot-walker — a person whose job is walking racehorses after races, workouts, etc. to allow them to cool off gradually
  • jabberwock — a playful imitation of language consisting of invented, meaningless words; nonsense; gibberish.
  • jackscrews — Plural form of jackscrew.
  • jackstraws — one of a group of strips of wood or similar objects, as straws or toothpicks, used in the game of jackstraws.
  • jawbreaker — Informal. a word that is hard to pronounce.
  • jaywalkers — Plural form of jaywalker.
  • king prawn — any of several large prawns of the genus Penaeus, which are fished commercially in Australian waters
  • knackwurst — a short, thick, highly seasoned sausage.
  • korean war — the war, begun on June 25, 1950, between North Korea, aided by Communist China, and South Korea, aided by the United States and other United Nations members forming a United Nations armed force: truce signed July 27, 1953.
  • lake worth — a city in SE Florida.
  • lawbreaker — a person who breaks or violates the law.
  • lawyerlike — Resembling a lawyer or some aspect of one.
  • like water — lavishly; freely
  • lower back — lumbar region
  • lukewarmly — In a lukewarm manner, tepidly, without extremeness.
  • lukewarmth — lukewarmness
  • make water — colloquial
  • mark twainRoger (William Roger Clemens"The Rocket") born 1962, U.S. baseball pitcher.
  • markiewicz — Constance, Countess, original name Constance Gore-Booth. 1868–1927, Irish nationalist, married to a Polish count. She fought in the Easter Rising (1916) and was sentenced to death but reprieved. The first woman elected to the British parliament (1918), she refused to take her seat
  • markswoman — a woman skilled in shooting at a mark; a woman who shoots well.
  • markswomen — Plural form of markswoman.
  • marsh hawk — northern harrier.
  • masterwork — masterpiece.
  • meadowlark — any of several American songbirds of the genus Sturnella, of the family Icteridae, especially S. magna (eastern meadowlark) and S. neglecta (western meadowlark) having a brownish and black back and wings and a yellow breast, noted for their clear, tuneful song.
  • metalworks — Plural form of metalwork.
  • moonwalker — One who moonwalks; an astronaut who has walked on the moon.
  • narrowback — a person of slight build who is unfit for hard labor.
  • newark bay — a bay in NE New Jersey. 6 miles (10 km) long; 1 mile (1.6 km) wide.
  • newsbreaks — Plural form of newsbreak.
  • newsmakers — Plural form of newsmaker.
  • paderewski — Ignace [French ee-nyas] /French iˈnyas/ (Show IPA), or Ignacy Jan [Polish ig-nah-tsi yahn] /Polish ɪgˈnɑ tsɪ yɑn/ (Show IPA), 1860–1941, Polish pianist, composer, patriot, and statesman.
  • parawalker — a metal structure fitted over the body to enable a disabled person to walk
  • pawnbroker — a person whose business is lending money at interest on personal, movable property deposited with the lender until redeemed.
  • power pack — a device for converting the voltage from a power line or battery to the various voltages required by the components of an electronic circuit.
  • quick draw — a game or competition in which the winner is the quickest person to draw a handgun from a holster and sometimes to fire it and hit a target.
  • quickwater — the part of a river or other stream having a strong current.
  • racewalker — a person who participates in racewalking
  • red kowhai — parrot's-bill.
  • ropewalker — a ropedancer.
  • scharwenka — (Ludwig) Philipp [loot-vikh fee-lip] /ˈlut vɪx ˈfi lɪp/ (Show IPA), 1847–1917, German composer.
  • screw jack — jackscrew.
  • shopwalker — a floorwalker.
  • strap work — a type of ornamentation imitating pierced and interlaced straps or bands, usually forming a geometric pattern.
  • throw back — to propel or cast in any way, especially to project or propel from the hand by a sudden forward motion or straightening of the arm and wrist: to throw a ball.
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