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10-letter words containing w, c, t

  • west coast — the western coast of the U.S., bordering the Pacific Ocean and comprising the coastal areas of California, Oregon, and Washington.
  • what price — You use what price in front of a word or expression that refers to something happening when you want to ask how likely it is to happen. You usually do this to emphasize either that it is very likely or very unlikely.
  • wheat cake — a pancake made of wheat flour.
  • whipstitch — to sew with stitches passing over an edge, in joining, finishing, or gathering.
  • whipstocks — Plural form of whipstock.
  • white buck — a casual oxford shoe made of white buckskin.
  • white cake — a cake that is pale in color because its batter contains the whites of eggs but no yolks
  • white cell — leukocyte
  • white chip — a white-colored chip having the lowest value (contrasted with blue chip).
  • white coal — Informal. water, as of a stream, used for power.
  • white coat — a white coat worn over everyday clothes by a doctor in a hospital or a scientist
  • white crab — ghost crab.
  • white race — fair-skinned people
  • white rock — a city in SW British Columbia, in SW Canada, SE of Vancouver.
  • white-face — a Hereford.
  • whitecedar — (US) alternative spelling of white cedar.
  • whitecoats — Plural form of whitecoat.
  • whitespace — Alternative spelling of white space.
  • whitterick — a weasel or stout
  • wild pitch — a pitched ball that the catcher misses and could not be expected to catch, resulting in a base runner's or runners' advancing one or more bases or the batter's reaching first base safely.
  • wild track — a soundtrack recorded other than with a synchronized picture, usually carrying sound effects, random dialogue, etc
  • wildcatted — Simple past tense and past participle of wildcat.
  • wildcatter — an oil prospector.
  • winceyette — a plain-weave cotton fabric with slightly raised two-sided nap
  • winchester — (in the Middle Ages) a kingdom, later an earldom, in S England. Capital: Winchester.
  • wind chest — a chamber containing the air supply for the reeds or pipes of an organ.
  • windy city — Chicago, Ill. (used as a nickname).
  • wire cloth — a material of wires of moderate fineness, used for making strainers, manufacturing paper, etc.
  • witch ball — a decorated blown glass ball.
  • witch moth — any of several large noctuid moths of the genus Erebus, especially the blackish E. odora (black witch) of Central and North America.
  • witch-hunt — to subject to a witch hunt.
  • witchcraft — the art or practices of a witch; sorcery; magic.
  • witchgrass — Any of several grasses, of the genus Panicum, often found as a weed.
  • witchweeds — Plural form of witchweed.
  • with child — pregnant
  • witticised — Simple past tense and past participle of witticise.
  • witticisms — Plural form of witticism.
  • wood pitch — the final product of the destructive distillation of wood.
  • woodcutter — a person who cuts down trees for firewood.
  • woods colt — catch-colt (def 2).
  • woonsocket — a city in NE Rhode Island.
  • work ethic — a belief in the moral benefit and importance of work and its inherent ability to strengthen character.
  • worst case — of the worst possibility; being the worst result that could be expected under the circumstances: a worst-case scenario.
  • worst-case — of the worst possibility; being the worst result that could be expected under the circumstances: a worst-case scenario.
  • wow factor — quality of being able to astound
  • wretchedly — very unfortunate in condition or circumstances; miserable; pitiable.
  • wristlocks — Plural form of wristlock.
  • wristwatch — a watch attached to a strap or band worn about the wrist.
  • write back — send a written or typed reply
  • wycliffite — of or relating to Wycliffe or the Wycliffites.
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