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

  • to lay waste — If something or someone lays waste an area or town or lays waste to it, they completely destroy it.
  • torts lawyer — a lawyer who specializes in tort cases
  • tree swallow — a bluish-green and white swallow, Iridoprocne bicolor, of North America, that nests in tree cavities.
  • two sicilies — Two Sicilies.
  • vowel system — the vowel sounds of a language, especially when considered as forming an interrelated and interacting group.
  • water closet — an enclosed room or compartment containing a toilet bowl fitted with a mechanism for flushing.
  • water locust — a spiny tree, Gleditsia aquatica, of the legume family, native to the southeastern coastal U.S., having pinnate leaves, greenish-yellow, bell-shaped flowers, and long-stalked, thin pods.
  • water pistol — a toy gun that shoots a stream of liquid.
  • watercolours — Plural form of watercolour.
  • well-stocked — a supply of goods kept on hand for sale to customers by a merchant, distributor, manufacturer, etc.; inventory.
  • west babylon — a city on S Long Island, in SE New York.
  • west lothian — a historic county in S Scotland.
  • west suffolk — a former administrative division of Suffolk, in E England.
  • western blot — a highly sensitive procedure for identifying and measuring the amount of a specific protein in a mixed extract, as in testing for AIDS virus protein in a blood sample: proteins are separated by gel electrophoresis and transferred to a special filter paper, on which the protein under investigation can be detected by a probe, as the binding of a labeled antibody.
  • western roll — a technique in high-jumping in which the jumper executes a half-turn of the body to clear the bar
  • westmorelandWilliam Childs [chahyldz] /tʃaɪldz/ (Show IPA), 1914–2005, U.S. army officer: commander of U.S. forces in Vietnam and Thailand 1964–68.
  • whistle-stop — to campaign for political office by traveling around the country, originally by train, stopping at small communities to address voters.
  • white salmon — the yellowtail, Seriola lalandei.
  • whole sister — a sister whose parents are the same as one's own.
  • wigglesworthMichael, 1631–1705, U.S. theologian and author, born in England.
  • will contest — legal proceedings to contest the authenticity or validity of a will.
  • 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.
  • wolf-whistle — If someone wolf-whistles, they make a whistling sound with a short rising note and a longer falling note. Some men wolf-whistle at a woman to show that they think she is attractive, and some women find this offensive.
  • wollastonite — a mineral, calcium silicate, CaSiO 3 , occurring usually in fibrous white masses.
  • wool stapler — a dealer in wool.
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