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10-letter words containing w, e, t, h

  • makeweight — something put in a scale to complete a required weight.
  • milk white — You can use milk white to describe things that are a milky white colour.
  • milk-white — of a white or slightly blue-white color, as that of milk.
  • mother wit — natural or practical intelligence, wit, or sense.
  • mother yaw — the initial lesion of yaws, occurring at the site of inoculation.
  • motherwellRobert, 1915–91, U.S. painter.
  • motherwort — a European plant, Leonorus cardiaca, of the mint family, an introduced weed in the U.S., having cut leaves with a whorl of lavender flowers in the axils.
  • nameworthy — worthy of or deserving a name
  • net weight — goods minus packaging
  • netherward — bottom-most, lowest
  • news-sheet — A news-sheet is a small newspaper that is usually printed and distributed in small quantities by a local political or social organization.
  • newsworthy — of sufficient interest to the public or a special audience to warrant press attention or coverage.
  • north-west — The north-west is the direction which is halfway between north and west.
  • noteworthy — worthy of notice or attention; notable; remarkable: a noteworthy addition to our collection of rare books.
  • on the way — en route
  • otherwhere — elsewhere.
  • otherwhile — at another time or other times.
  • otherworld — A world beyond death; an afterlife.
  • outweighed — Simple past tense and past participle of outweigh.
  • overgrowth — a growth overspreading or covering something.
  • overthwart — to lie across
  • overweight — weighing too much or more than is considered normal, proper, etc.: overweight luggage; an overweight patient; two letters that may be overweight.
  • owlet moth — noctuid (def 1).
  • paperwhite — polyanthus (sense 2)
  • pennyworth — as much as may be bought for a penny.
  • poor white — a member of a class of white people, especially of the southern U.S., having low social status and little or no money, property, or education. See also white trash.
  • printwheel — daisy wheel.
  • rawsthorne — Alan. 1905–71, English composer, whose works include three symphonies, several concertos, and a set of Symphonic Studies (1939)
  • restharrow — a low, pink-flowered European shrub, Ononis spinosa, of the legume family, having tough roots that hinder the plow or harrow.
  • schweitzerAlbert, 1875–1965, Alsatian writer, missionary, doctor, and musician in Africa: Nobel Peace Prize 1952.
  • schwittersKurt [koo rt] /kʊərt/ (Show IPA), 1887–1948, German artist.
  • self-worth — the sense of one's own value or worth as a person; self-esteem; self-respect.
  • shallowest — of little depth; not deep: shallow water.
  • shearwater — any of several long-winged petrels of the genus Puffinus that appear to shear the water with their wing tips when flying low.
  • sheet down — (of rain) to fall heavily in sheets
  • short wave — Electricity. a radio wave, shorter than that used in AM broadcasting, corresponding to frequencies of over 1600 kilohertz: used for long-distance reception or transmission.
  • short-wave — Electricity. a radio wave, shorter than that used in AM broadcasting, corresponding to frequencies of over 1600 kilohertz: used for long-distance reception or transmission.
  • shot tower — a tower from the top of which finely divided streams of molten lead are dropped down a central well, breaking up into spherical drops during their fall to be quenched and hardened in a tank of water at the bottom.
  • showboater — a boat, especially a paddle-wheel steamer, used as a traveling theater.
  • shower tea — kitchen tea.
  • sleep with — to take the rest afforded by a suspension of voluntary bodily functions and the natural suspension, complete or partial, of consciousness; cease being awake.
  • snow-white — white as snow.
  • soft wheat — a wheat characterized by soft, starchy kernels that yield a flour used in making pastry, breakfast cereals, etc.
  • south-west — The south-west is the direction which is halfway between south and west.
  • sternwheel — a paddle wheel at the stern of a vessel.
  • sweat-shop — a shop employing workers at low wages, for long hours, and under poor conditions.
  • sweathouse — (especially among North American Indians) a special building used for cleansing and purifying one's body by sweating, in which heated water is poured over heated stones to produce steam.
  • sweatshirt — a loose, long-sleeved, collarless pullover of soft, absorbent fabric, as cotton jersey, with close-fitting or elastic cuffs and sometimes a drawstring at the waist, commonly worn during athletic activity for warmth or to induce sweating.
  • sweet shop — a store that sells candy.
  • sweet-shop — a store that sells candy.
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