11-letter words containing w, e, k, r
- downstrokes — Plural form of downstroke.
- drudge-work — work that is menial and tedious and therefore distasteful; drudgery.
- easter week — the week that begins with Easter Day and ends the following Saturday
- electroweak — combining both the electromagnetic and weak forces or interactions
- farm worker — a person who is hired to work on a farm
- farmworkers — Plural form of farmworker.
- fast worker — a person who is quick and shrewd in gaining personal advantage: A fast worker, he soon knew everyone who had any pull.
- fieldworker — Also, field work. work done in the field, as research, exploration, surveying, or interviewing: archaeological fieldwork.
- floorwalker — a person employed in a store to direct customers and supervise salespeople.
- foreknowing — Present participle of foreknow.
- framework 4 — A European Union funding programme, the information technology portion of which replaced ESPRIT.
- frankenword — (neologism) A word formed by combining two (or more) other words; a portmanteau.
- glassworker — a person who makes or does glasswork.
- hack writer — a writer of undistinguished literary work produced to order
- hand-worker — a person who does handwork
- hill walker — a person who takes part in hill walking
- homeworkers — Plural form of homeworker.
- homeworking — Working from home, especially when in electronic contact with a central office.
- homewrecker — One who is blamed for the breakup of a marriage or family, such as an adulterous partner.
- houseworker — a paid employee in a home, as a maid or cook.
- hunker down — to squat on one's heels (often followed by down).
- ironworkers — Plural form of ironworker.
- jabberwocky — a playful imitation of language consisting of invented, meaningless words; nonsense; gibberish.
- jaw-breaker — Informal. a word that is hard to pronounce.
- jawbreakers — Plural form of jawbreaker.
- journeywork — the work of a journeyman.
- kerb weight — the weight of a motor car without occupants, luggage, etc
- kew gardens — the Royal Botanic Gardens in the Greater London borough of Richmond-upon-Thames, on the River Thames; established in 1759 and given to the nation in 1841
- kidney worm — any of various large nematodes parasitic in the kidneys, especially Stephanurus dentatus, found in pigs.
- killer blow — something that puts a stop to something or defeats something
- kitchenware — cooking equipment or utensils.
- kite winder — a triangular winder on a staircase.
- know better — be sufficiently wise
- lacquerwork — lacquered wood, often with ivory inlays
- lake edward — a lake in central Africa, between Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo in the Great Rift Valley: empties through the Semliki River into Lake Albert. Area: about 2150 sq km (830 sq miles)
- land worker — a person who works on the land
- latticework — work consisting of crossed strips usually arranged in a diagonal pattern of open spaces.
- law-breaker — A law-breaker is someone who breaks the law.
- lawbreakers — Plural form of lawbreaker.
- lawbreaking — Unlawful; illegal.
- leatherwork — work or decoration done in leather.
- life's work — Someone's life's work or life work is the main activity that they have been involved in during their life, or their most important achievement.
- lock washer — a washer placed under a nut on a bolt or screw, so made as to prevent the nut from shaking loose.
- lower lakes — Lakes Erie and Ontario
- lukewarmish — fairly or somewhat lukewarm
- market town — a town where a regularly scheduled market is held.
- master-work — masterpiece.
- masterworks — Plural form of masterwork.
- meadowlarks — Plural form of meadowlark.
- metalworker — A person who shapes metal.