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11-letter words containing w, d, o

  • watchdogged — characteristic of a watchdog
  • waterlocked — enclosed entirely, or almost entirely, by water: a waterlocked nation.
  • waterlogged — so filled or flooded with water as to be heavy or unmanageable, as a ship.
  • watt-second — a unit of energy equal to the energy of one watt acting for one second; the equivalent of one joule.
  • weasel word — a word used to temper the forthrightness of a statement; a word that makes one's views equivocal, misleading, or confusing.
  • weatherford — a town in N Texas.
  • web du bois — William Edward Burghardt [burg-hahrd] /ˈbɜrg hɑrd/ (Show IPA), 1868–1963, U.S. educator and writer.
  • weight down — If you weight something down, you put something heavy on it or in it in order to prevent it from moving easily.
  • welding rod — filler metal supplied in the form of a rod, usually coated with flux
  • well-bonded — secured by or consisting of bonds: bonded debt.
  • well-cooked — having been cooked with skill so as to be pleasant to eat
  • well-copied — an imitation, reproduction, or transcript of an original: a copy of a famous painting.
  • well-formed — rightly or pleasingly formed: a well-formed contour.
  • well-sorted — (of sedimentary particles) uniform in size.
  • well-wooded — covered with or abounding in woods or trees.
  • well-worded — a unit of language, consisting of one or more spoken sounds or their written representation, that functions as a principal carrier of meaning. Words are composed of one or more morphemes and are either the smallest units susceptible of independent use or consist of two or three such units combined under certain linking conditions, as with the loss of primary accent that distinguishes black·bird· from black· bird·. Words are usually separated by spaces in writing, and are distinguished phonologically, as by accent, in many languages.
  • well-worked — that has undergone working.
  • wellfounded — (math) Alternative form of well-founded.
  • wendy house — a child's playhouse.
  • wereleopard — (fiction) A shapeshifter who can change between leopard and human form.
  • west jordan — a town in N central Utah.
  • westmorland — a former county in NW England, now part of Cumbria, partially in the Lake District.
  • whacked out — tired; exhausted; worn-out.
  • whacked-out — tired; exhausted; worn-out.
  • whangdoodle — a fanciful creature of undefined nature.
  • wheedlesome — tending to wheedle
  • whiskerando — a man with extravagant whiskers
  • whit monday — the Monday following Whitsunday.
  • white cloud — a small, brightly colored freshwater fish, Tanichthys albonubes, native to China: popular in home aquariums.
  • white goods — household appliances
  • white sound — white noise.
  • white-robed — clothed in a white robe.
  • whiteboards — Plural form of whiteboard.
  • whodunnitry — the style or genre of novels, plays, etc concerned with crime
  • whole blood — blood directly from the body, from which none of the components have been removed, used in transfusions.
  • whoop-de-do — lively and noisy festivities; merrymaking: New Year's Eve whoop-de-do.
  • widemouthed — (of a person, object, body of water, etc.) having a mouth that is wide: a widemouthed river.
  • widow woman — a widow.
  • widowerhood — The state or period of being a widower.
  • widowmakers — Plural form of widowmaker.
  • wild carrot — an umbelliferous plant, Daucus carota, of temperate regions, having clusters of white flowers and hooked fruits
  • wild flower — the flower of a plant that normally grows in fields, forests, etc., without deliberate cultivation.
  • wild indigo — any of several plants belonging to the genus Baptisia, of the legume family, especially B. tinctoria, having yellow flowers.
  • wild orange — laurel cherry.
  • wild potato — a plant, Solanum jamesii, of the southwestern U.S., related to the edible cultivated potato.
  • wildflowers — Plural form of wildflower.
  • wildfowling — Present participle of wildfowl.
  • willow wand — a slender stick or rod made of willow used especially in magic or divination
  • wind-broken — having the breathing impaired; affected with heaves.
  • windom peak — a mountain in SW Colorado, in the San Juan Mountains. 14,082 feet (4292 meters).
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