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12-letter words containing w, e, s, t, h, l

  • at wholesale — in large quantities
  • bottlewasher — a person or machine that washes bottles.
  • breast wheel — a waterwheel onto which the propelling water is fed at the height of a horizontal axle.
  • leatherwoods — Plural form of leatherwood.
  • lightweights — Plural form of lightweight.
  • lower depths — a play (1902) by Maxim Gorki.
  • malt whiskey — Malt whiskey or malt is whiskey that is made from malt.
  • netherworlds — Plural form of netherworld.
  • pennywhistle — a cheap toy whistle orig. sold for a penny
  • pleased with — satisfied or content with
  • polish wheat — a wheat, Triticum polonicum, grown chiefly in S Europe, N Africa, and Turkestan.
  • reality show — A reality show is a type of television program that aims to show how ordinary people behave in everyday life, or in situations, often created by the program makers, which are intended to represent everyday life.
  • saw-whet owl — a very small North American owl, Aegolius acadicus, having streaked, brown plumage and lacking ear tufts.
  • self-wrought — Archaic except in some senses. a simple past tense and past participle of work.
  • shawl tongue — kiltie (def 3).
  • shower stall — an individual compartment or self-contained unit, having a single shower and accommodating one person.
  • shut-in well — confined to one's home, a hospital, etc., as from illness.
  • sternwheeler — a boat propelled by a paddle wheel at the stern.
  • stitch wheel — a notched wheel used by a harness maker to mark out the spacing for stitching
  • swash letter — an ornamental italic capital letter having a flourish extending beyond the body of the type.
  • switch plate — a plate, usually of metal, ceramic, or plastic, covering a switch so that the knob or toggle protrudes.
  • the lowlands — a low generally flat region of central Scotland, around the Forth and Clyde valleys, separating the Southern Uplands from the Highlands
  • the shallows — a shallow place in a body of water
  • the whirlies — illness induced by excessive use of alcohol or drugs
  • wash leather — a soft leather, usually made of sheepskin
  • wash-leather — a soft leather, usually sheepskin, dressed in imitation of chamois.
  • watchfulness — vigilant or alert; closely observant: The sentry remained watchful throughout the night.
  • water shield — Also called water target. an aquatic plant, Brasenia schreberi, of the water lily family, having purple flowers, floating, elliptic leaves, and a jellylike coating on the underwater stems and roots.
  • water splash — a place where a stream runs over a road
  • weatherglass — any of various instruments, as a barometer or a hygroscope, designed to indicate the state of the atmosphere.
  • weightlessly — Whilst weightless; without weight.
  • welsh rabbit — a dish of melted cheese, usually mixed with ale or beer, milk, and spices, served over toast.
  • welwitschias — Plural form of welwitschia.
  • west lothian — a historic county in S Scotland.
  • wethersfield — a town in central Connecticut.
  • wheel static — noise in an automobile radio induced by wheel rotation.
  • wheeltappers — Plural form of wheeltapper.
  • wheelwrights — Plural form of wheelwright.
  • wherewithals — Plural form of wherewithal.
  • whippletrees — Plural form of whippletree.
  • whistle-stop — to campaign for political office by traveling around the country, originally by train, stopping at small communities to address voters.
  • white plains — a city in SE New York, near New York City: battle 1776.
  • white salmon — the yellowtail, Seriola lalandei.
  • white slaver — a person engaged in white-slave traffic or business.
  • white squall — a whirlwind at sea or a violent disturbance of small radius not accompanied by clouds but indicated merely by whitecaps and turbulent water.
  • white-slaver — a person engaged in white-slave traffic or business.
  • whole sister — a sister whose parents are the same as one's own.
  • wigglesworthMichael, 1631–1705, U.S. theologian and author, born in England.
  • wilton house — a mansion in Wilton in Wiltshire: built for the 1st Earl of Pembroke in the 16th century; rebuilt after a fire in 1647 by Inigo Jones and John Webb; altered in the 19th century by James Wyatt; landscaped grounds include a famous Palladian bridge
  • wolf whistle — a wolf call made by whistling, often characterized by two sliding sounds, a peal up to a higher note and then one up to a lower note and down.

On this page, we collect all 12-letter words with W-E-S-T-H-L. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 12-letter word that contains in W-E-S-T-H-L to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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