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10-letter words containing w, d, r

  • wanderjahr — a year or period of travel, especially following one's schooling and before practicing a profession.
  • wanderlust — a strong, innate desire to rove or travel about.
  • wandsworth — a borough of Greater London, England.
  • war clouds — sign of trouble ahead
  • war record — the recorded achievements of a soldier, sailor, airman etc in a war
  • ward eight — a mixed drink containing whiskey, lemon juice, grenadine, and often soda water, served in a tall glass with crushed ice and sometimes garnished with an orange slice and a cherry.
  • ward round — a regular visit to patients in hospital by medical staff for the purpose of making decisions concerning patient care
  • wardenship — The state of being a warden.
  • wardrobing — a stock of clothes or costumes, as of a person or of a theatrical company.
  • warehoused — Simple past tense and past participle of warehouse.
  • warlording — (Internet) The act of denouncing, dissecting or mocking bloated signature blocks in Usenet postings.
  • warlordism — a military leader, especially of a warlike nation.
  • warp speed — an extremely rapid rate of speed: rumors traveling at warp speed.
  • warpedness — The state, quality or condition of being warped.
  • warrandice — (legal) A form of warranty, in Scots law, in which a person conveying property was held liable for any outstanding claims on the property.
  • warrantied — an act or an instance of warranting; assurance; authorization; warrant.
  • washboards — Plural form of washboard.
  • watchguard — a security chain or cord for a watch
  • watchwords — Plural form of watchword.
  • water bird — an aquatic bird; a swimming or wading bird.
  • water down — a transparent, odorless, tasteless liquid, a compound of hydrogen and oxygen, H 2 O, freezing at 32°F or 0°C and boiling at 212°F or 100°C, that in a more or less impure state constitutes rain, oceans, lakes, rivers, etc.: it contains 11.188 percent hydrogen and 88.812 percent oxygen, by weight.
  • water mold — any of various aquatic fungi of the phylum Oomycota, free-living or parasitic in fish and other aquatic organisms.
  • water-laid — noting a rope laid left-handed from three or four plain-laid ropes, in the making of which water was used to wet the fibers instead of the more customary oil or tallow.
  • waterboard — Subject (someone) to the process of waterboarding.
  • waterdrive — (of an oil or gas reservoir) using water to force out the oil or gas
  • waterflood — (in the petroleum industry) a method of secondary recovery whereby water is pumped into reservoir rock to force out oil that has ceased to flow under its own pressure.
  • watersheds — Plural form of watershed.
  • watersider — a wharf labourer
  • waterskied — Simple past tense and past participle of waterski.
  • waterslide — Alternative form of water slide.
  • waterweeds — Plural form of waterweed.
  • wattlebird — any of several Australian honey eaters of the genus Anthochaera, most of which have fleshy wattles at the sides of the neck.
  • weaverbird — any of numerous African and Asian finchlike birds of the family Ploceidae, noted for their elaborately woven nests and colonial habits.
  • web editor — software for creating internet content
  • weedkiller — a herbicide.
  • weekenders — Plural form of weekender.
  • weighboard — a thin layer (e.g. shale or clay) between bands of thicker strata (e.g. limestone or sandstone)
  • well-aired — a mixture of nitrogen, oxygen, and minute amounts of other gases that surrounds the earth and forms its atmosphere.
  • well-armed — bearing firearms; having weapons: a heavily armed patrol.
  • well-drawn — past participle of draw.
  • well-tried — A well-tried treatment, product, or method is one that has been used many times before and so is known to work well or to be successful.
  • wellformed — Alternative form of well-formed.
  • wesermunde — former name of Bremerhaven.
  • west ender — a native or inhabitant of the West End of London
  • westwardly — having a westward direction or situation: the westwardly migration of the 1850s.
  • wharf shed — a building located on or near a pier (piershed) or wharf (wharf shed) used for short-term storage of cargo in transit.
  • whereunder — under which
  • whip-round — When a group of people have a whip-round, money is collected from each person so that it can be used to buy something for all of them or for someone they all know.
  • whirlwinds — Plural form of whirlwind.
  • whirlybird — helicopter.
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