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

  • west timor — province of Indonesia, consisting primarily of the W half of Timor
  • westerlies — moving, directed, or situated toward the west: the westerly end of the field.
  • westerners — Plural form of westerner.
  • westernise — Non-Oxford British standard spelling of westernize.
  • westernism — a word, idiom, or practice characteristic of people of the Occident or of the western U.S.
  • westernize — to influence with ideas, customs, practices, etc., characteristic of the Occident or of the western U.S.
  • westphalia — a former province in NW Germany, now a part of North Rhine-Westphalia: treaty ending the Thirty Years' War 1648.
  • westwardly — having a westward direction or situation: the westwardly migration of the 1850s.
  • whaleboats — Plural form of whaleboat.
  • what goes? — what's happening?
  • whatsaname — Any object whose name one does not know or cannot remember.
  • whatsoever — At all (used for emphasis).
  • wheat rust — any of several diseases of wheat caused by rust fungi of the genus Puccinia.
  • wheatgrass — any of several wheatlike grasses of the genus Agropyron, grown for forage in the western U.S.
  • wheatstoneSir Charles, 1802–75, English physicist and inventor.
  • wheatworms — Plural form of wheatworm.
  • whetstones — Plural form of whetstone.
  • whistle up — to call or summon (a person or animal) by whistling
  • white bass — an edible freshwater fish, Morone chrysops, of the Great Lakes and Mississippi River drainage, silvery with yellow below and having the sides streaked with blackish lines.
  • white fish — any of several fishes of the family Coregonidae, inhabiting northern waters of North America and Eurasia, similar to the trout but having a smaller mouth and larger scales. Compare lake whitefish, round whitefish.
  • white hass — a pudding containing oatmeal
  • white lias — a type of rock composed of pale-coloured limestones and marls
  • white list — a list of novels, motion pictures, etc., deemed suitable for juveniles, members of a particular faith, or other specified groups of individuals.
  • white pass — a mountain pass in SE Alaska, near Skagway. 2888 feet (880 meters) high.
  • white rose — the emblem of the royal house of York.
  • white rust — Plant Pathology. a disease of plants, characterized by pustules of white spores on affected parts that become yellow and malformed, caused by fungi of the genus Albugo.
  • white sage — Also called greasewood. a shrubby plant, Salvia apiana, of the mint family, native to southern California, having white, hairy foliage and spikes of white or pale lavender flowers.
  • white sale — a sale of sheets, pillowcases, and other white goods.
  • white shoe — of or relating to members of the upper class who own or run large corporations: white-shoe bankers; a conservative white-shoe image.
  • white-shoe — of or relating to members of the upper class who own or run large corporations: white-shoe bankers; a conservative white-shoe image.
  • whitecoats — Plural form of whitecoat.
  • whiteflies — Plural form of whitefly.
  • whiteheads — Plural form of whitehead.
  • whitehorse — a river flowing NW and then SW from NW Canada through Alaska to the Bering Sea. About 2000 miles (3220 km) long.
  • whitesmith — a tinsmith.
  • whitespace — Alternative spelling of white space.
  • whitewalls — Plural form of whitewall.
  • whitewoods — Plural form of whitewood.
  • whole rest — a rest equivalent in duration to a whole note.
  • whole step — an interval of two semitones, as A-B or B-C♯; a major second.
  • wiesenthalSimon, 1908–2005, Austrian Holocaust survivor and hunter of Nazi war criminals.
  • wight-isleIsle of, an island off the S coast of England, forming an administrative division of Hampshire. 147 sq. mi. (381 sq. km). County seat: Newport.
  • wild beast — savage animal
  • wildebeest — gnu.
  • willemstad — the main island of the Netherlands Antilles, off the NW coast of Venezuela. 173 sq. mi. (448 sq. km). Capital: Willemstad.
  • willingest — Superlative form of willing.
  • winchester — (in the Middle Ages) a kingdom, later an earldom, in S England. Capital: Winchester.
  • wind chest — a chamber containing the air supply for the reeds or pipes of an organ.
  • wind-swept — open or exposed to the wind: a wind-swept beach.
  • winetaster — a critic, writer, buyer, or other professional who tests the quality of wine by tasting.
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