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12-letter words containing w, e, d

  • dwarf cornel — the bunchberry.
  • dwarf laurel — a low North American shrub, Kalmia angustifolia, of the heath family, having oblong leaves poisonous to grazing animals.
  • dwarf planet — a spherical celestial body revolving about the sun, similar to a planet but not large enough to gravitationally clear its orbital region of most or all other celestial bodies. Pluto is a dwarf planet.
  • easting down — the passage eastward from the Cape of Good Hope, as made by a sailing ship bound for Australia or the East Indies.
  • ebb and flow — tidal movement
  • editorial we — we (def 6).
  • edward abbeyEdward, 1927–89, U.S. novelist and nature writer.
  • edwardsville — a town in SW Illinois.
  • edwin hubbleEdwin Powell, 1889–1953, U.S. astronomer: pioneer in extragalactic research.
  • egg sandwich — two slices of bread filled with chopped egg
  • face down/up — If someone or something is face down, their face or front points downwards. If they are face up, their face or front points upwards.
  • false mildew — downy mildew (def 1).
  • false-mildew — Also called false mildew. any fungus of the family Peronosporaceae, causing many plant diseases and producing a white, downy mass of conidiophores, usually on the under surface of the leaves of the host plant.
  • far and wide — at or to a great distance; a long way off; at or to a remote point: We sailed far ahead of the fleet.
  • feed-forward — A multi-layer perceptron network in which the outputs from all neurons (see McCulloch-Pitts) go to following but not preceding layers, so there are no feedback loops.
  • fellowshiped — Simple past tense and past participle of fellowship.
  • flash powder — powder that could be ignited to provide a bright light to take a photograph
  • flower child — (especially in the 1960s) a young person, especially a hippie, rejecting conventional society and advocating love, peace, and simple, idealistic values.
  • flying wedge — a fast-moving group of law-enforcement officers in a compact, wedge-shaped formation that can infiltrate crowds or protect someone effectively.
  • for a wonder — to think or speculate curiously: to wonder about the origin of the solar system.
  • foreshadowed — Simple past tense and past participle of foreshadow.
  • foreshadower — One who or that which foreshadows.
  • forward dive — a dive from a position facing the water in which the diver jumps up from the springboard, rotating the body forward, and enters the water either headfirst or feetfirst.
  • forward gear — a gear in a vehicle that is used when the vehicle is moving forward
  • forward line — the soldiers at the forward most position in an army force
  • forward rate — the agreed price for something that is to be bought or sold at a later date
  • forward sale — the sale of something that is to be delivered and paid for at a later date
  • full powered — (of a vessel) relying on engines for propulsion without assistance from sails.
  • gable window — a window in or under a gable.
  • gateway drug — any mood-altering drug, as a stimulant or tranquilizer, that does not cause physical dependence but may lead to the use of addictive drugs, as heroin.
  • george deweyGeorge, 1837–1917, U.S. admiral: defeated Spanish fleet in Manila Bay during the Spanish-American War.
  • giant powder — dynamite composed of nitroglycerin and kieselguhr.
  • gift-wrapped — A gift-wrapped present is wrapped in pretty paper.
  • golden-brown — of brown with a golden tinge
  • grandnephews — Plural form of grandnephew.
  • grosswardein — German name of Oradea.
  • ground water — the water beneath the surface of the ground, consisting largely of surface water that has seeped down: the source of water in springs and wells.
  • groundworker — One who works on the ground, as opposed to an aviator, etc.
  • half-drowned — to die under water or other liquid of suffocation.
  • halfwittedly — In a halfwitted manner.
  • hand-me-down — an article of clothing passed on to another person after being used, outgrown, etc.: The younger children wore the hand-me-downs of the older ones.
  • hand-written — to write (something) by hand.
  • hard-wearing — resistant to extensive wear; durable: a pair of hardwearing jeans.
  • harper woods — a city in SE Michigan, near Detroit.
  • harris tweed — a hand-woven tweed made only by residents in the Outer Hebrides from locally dyed and spun wool
  • hawk's beard — any of various plants of the genus Crepis, of the daisy family, resembling the dandelion but having a branched stem with several flowers.
  • hawk's-beard — any of various plants of the genus Crepis, of the daisy family, resembling the dandelion but having a branched stem with several flowers.
  • hello, world — (programming)   The canonical, minimal, first program that a programmer writes in a new programming language or development environment. The program just prints "hello, world" to standard output in order to verify that the programmer can successfully edit, compile and run a simple program before embarking on anything more challenging. Hello, world is the first example program in the C programming book, K&R, and the tradition has spread from there to pretty much every other language and many of their textbooks. Environments that generate an unreasonably large executable for this trivial test or which require a hairy compiler-linker invocation to generate it are considered bad.
  • henceforward — from now on; from this point forward.
  • henry howardEarl of (Henry Howard) 1517?–47, English poet.
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