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11-letter words containing w, d, o

  • chowderhead — a fool or an idiot
  • citron wood — the wood of the citron tree
  • cold shower — shower: in cold water
  • collingwood — a city in SE Australia, near Melbourne.
  • comedy show — a funny programme on TV or radio
  • companywide — Extending throughout a company.
  • condo owner — A condo owner is the owner of a condominium.
  • copywronged — copybroke
  • cordwainery — Shoemaking.
  • corkscrewed — Simple past tense and past participle of corkscrew.
  • cottonwoods — Plural form of cottonwood.
  • counterdraw — to copy (a painting, etc) by tracing it onto a transparent material, such as oiled paper
  • counterword — a word widely used in a sense much looser than its original meaning, such as tremendous or awful
  • countrywide — Something that happens or exists countrywide happens or exists throughout the whole of a particular country.
  • cowardliest — Superlative form of cowardly.
  • crowd scene — (in a film, play, or television programme) a scene in which a crowd appears
  • crowded out — full to capacity; full to bursting
  • crowdedness — The state or quality of being crowded.
  • crowder pea — any variety of cowpea bearing pods with closely spaced seeds.
  • crowdfunded — Simple past tense and past participle of crowdfund.
  • crowdsource — to outsource work to an unspecified group of people, typically by making an appeal to the general public on the internet
  • crown daisy — a garden plant, Chrysanthemum coronarium, of the composite family, native to southern Europe, having numerous yellowish-white flower heads.
  • crown derby — a type of porcelain manufactured at Derby from 1784–1848
  • crowstepped — (of a gable) having crow steps
  • cupid's bow — a shape of the upper lip considered to resemble Cupid's double-curved bow
  • dawn chorus — The dawn chorus is the singing of birds at dawn.
  • dawn patrol — a flight, especially during the early days of military aviation, undertaken at dawn or early morning in order to reconnoiter enemy positions.
  • deal a blow — If an event deals a blow to something or someone, it causes them great difficulties or makes failure more likely.
  • deflowering — Present participle of deflower.
  • dirty power — Electrical mains voltage that is unfriendly to the delicate innards of computers. Spikes, drop-outs, average voltage significantly higher or lower than nominal, or just plain noise can all cause problems of varying subtlety and severity (these are collectively known as power hits).
  • disallowing — Present participle of disallow.
  • disavowable — capable of being disavowed
  • disbowelled — disembowelled
  • disc harrow — a harrow with sharp-edged slightly concave discs mounted on horizontal shafts and used to cut clods or debris on the surface of the soil or to cover seed after planting
  • discrowning — Present participle of discrown.
  • disembowels — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disembowel.
  • disempowers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of disempower.
  • disk flower — one of a number of small tubular flowers composing the disk of certain composite plants.
  • disk harrow — a harrow having a number of sharp-edged, concave disks set at such an angle that as the harrow is drawn along the ground they turn the soil, pulverize it, and destroy weeds.
  • do up brown — to do completely or perfectly
  • dobby weave — a weave with small, geometric patterns
  • dock worker — A dock worker is a person who works in the docks, loading and unloading ships.
  • dockworkers — Plural form of dockworker.
  • dog whistle — Politics. a political strategy, statement, slogan, etc., that conveys a controversial, secondary message understood only by those who support the message: His criticism of welfare was a dog whistle appealing to racist voters.
  • dog-whistle — Politics. a political strategy, statement, slogan, etc., that conveys a controversial, secondary message understood only by those who support the message: His criticism of welfare was a dog whistle appealing to racist voters.
  • don't knows — people who have not reached a definite opinion on a subject, esp as a response to a questionnaire
  • donkey work — Informal. tedious, repetitious work; drudgery.
  • donkey-work — Informal. tedious, repetitious work; drudgery.
  • dorset down — a breed of stocky hornless sheep having a broad head, dark face, and a dense fleece: kept for lamb production
  • double whip — an instrument for striking, as in driving animals or in punishing, typically consisting of a lash or other flexible part with a more rigid handle.
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