11-letter words containing w, h, i, t, e, r
- white horse — a white-topped wave; whitecap.
- white meter — an electricity meter used to record the consumption of off-peak electricity
- white paper — paper bleached white.
- white perch — a small game fish, Morone americana, greenish-gray above and silvery below, inhabiting streams along the Atlantic coast of the U.S.
- white river — a river flowing SE from NW Arkansas into the Mississippi River. 690 miles (1110 km) long.
- white shark — great white shark.
- white stork — a large Eurasian stork, Ciconia ciconia, having white plumage with black in the wings and a red bill.
- white trash — a member of the class of poor whites, especially in the southern U.S.
- white water — fast-moving foamy water
- white-bread — pertaining to or characteristic of the white middle class; bourgeois: a typical white-bread suburban neighborhood.
- white-robed — clothed in a white robe.
- whiteboards — Plural form of whiteboard.
- whitefeller — (Australia) A white settler in Australia; a non-Aboriginal Australian; often used attributively.
- whitefriars — a district in central London, England.
- whiteprints — Plural form of whiteprint.
- whitethorns — Plural form of whitethorn.
- whitethroat — any of several small songbirds having a throat that is white, especially an Old World warbler, Sylvia communis.
- whitewasher — One who, or that which, whitewashes.
- whitewaters — a town in SE Wisconsin.
- whitherward — toward what place; in what direction.
- whitleather — white leather.
- windcheater — a lightweight jacket for sports or other outdoor wear.
- winter moth — a brown geometrid moth, Operophtera brumata, of which the male is often seen against lighted windows in winter, the female being wingless
- winterishly — In a way that is characteristic of winter.
- wire-stitch — to stitch (the backs of gathered sections) by means of a machine that automatically forms staples from a continuous reel of wire.
- witch alder — a shrub, Fothergilla gardenii, of the witch hazel family, native to the southeastern U.S., having spikes of white flowers that bloom before the leaves appear.
- with reason — a basis or cause, as for some belief, action, fact, event, etc.: the reason for declaring war.
- wither away — weaken and die
- witheringly — to shrivel; fade; decay: The grapes had withered on the vine.
- withershins — in a direction contrary to the natural one, especially contrary to the apparent course of the sun or counterclockwise: considered as unlucky or causing disaster.
- witherspoon — John, 1723–94, U.S. theologian and statesman, born in Scotland.
- withstander — A person who withstands or resists; an opponent.