11-letter words containing w, f, r
- white friar — a Carmelite friar: so called from the distinctive white cloak worn by the order.
- white frost — a heavy coating of frost.
- whitefeller — (Australia) A white settler in Australia; a non-Aboriginal Australian; often used attributively.
- whitefriars — a district in central London, England.
- whore after — to pursue something immoral or depraved
- wife-beater — a person who hits his or her wife
- wilberforce — William, 1759–1833, British statesman, philanthropist, and writer.
- wild flower — the flower of a plant that normally grows in fields, forests, etc., without deliberate cultivation.
- wildcrafter — One who takes part in wildcraft.
- wildflowers — Plural form of wildflower.
- windsurfing — a form of sailing in which a flexible sail, free to move in any direction, is mounted on a surfboard and the craft guided by the standing rider.
- witchcrafts — Plural form of witchcraft.
- wolf spider — any of numerous ground spiders of the family Lycosidae, including the southern European tarantula, Lycosa taretula, that hunt their prey instead of using a web.
- wonderfully — excellent; great; marvelous: We all had a wonderful weekend.
- woodcrafter — a person who makes or carves wooden objects.
- word of god — the, word (def 11).
- wordperfect — 1. (text, tool, product) A word processor for a wide range of computers. The first version was sold in 1980 for Data General machines, and by the end of 1993 versions were on sale for MS-DOS, Microsoft Windows and Macintosh computers. WordPerfect 6.0 for Unix was scheduled for introduction in May 1994. Versions: WordPerfect 6.1 for Windows, WordPerfect 3.1 for Macintosh/Power Macintosh, WordPerfect 6.0 for UNIX, WordPerfect 6.0 for DOS, WordPerfect 7.0 for Windows 95. 2. WordPerfect Corporation.
- work of art — a piece of creative work in the arts, especially a painting or sculpture.
- worksurface — A surface, usually resting on cupboards or drawers in a kitchen, that can be used to work on.
- worm out of — If you worm information out of someone, you gradually find it out by constantly asking them about it.
- wreckfishes — Plural form of wreckfish.
- wrong fount — an error in which a type of the wrong face or size is used