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12-letter words containing w, k, r, o

  • new york cut — a porterhouse steak with the fillet removed.
  • outside work — work done off the premises of a business
  • packed tower — A packed tower is a tall distillation vessel which uses packing.
  • passage work — writing that is often extraneous to the thematic material of a work and is typically of a virtuosic or decorative character: passagework consisting of scales, arpeggios, trills, and double octaves.
  • peacock worm — feather-duster worm.
  • pioneer work — pioneer work does something that has not been done before, for example by developing or using new methods or techniques
  • postworkshop — occurring after a workshop
  • powder flask — a small flask of gunpowder formerly carried by soldiers and hunters.
  • power broker — a person who wields great political, governmental, or financial power.
  • power kiting — an activity in which a person, sitting in a small buggy or wearing skis, etc, is propelled by the wind power generated by a large kite to which he or she is attached by ropes
  • power-broker — a person who wields great political, governmental, or financial power.
  • powerwalking — a form of exercise that involves rapid walking with arms bent and swinging naturally.
  • public works — government-funded construction
  • ring network — (networking, topology)   A network topology in which all nodes are connected to a single wire in a ring or point-to-point. There are no endpoints. This topology is used by token ring networks. Compare: bus network, star network.
  • rock wallaby — any wallaby of the genus Petrogale, having a banded or striped coat, slender body, and long legs and feet, inhabiting caves and rocky areas in Australia.
  • rostenkowski — Dan(iel) 1928–2010, U.S. politician: congressman 1959–94.
  • sale of work — a sale of goods and handicrafts made by the members of a club, church congregation, etc, to raise money
  • sea milkwort — a maritime plant, Glaux maritima, having small, pinkish-white flowers.
  • servile work — work of a physical nature that is forbidden on Sundays and on certain holidays
  • sewage works — a place where chemicals are used to clean sewage so that it can then be allowed to go into rivers, etc or used to make manure
  • shift worker — a person who does shiftwork
  • sink or swim — fail or succeed
  • sparrow hawk — a small, short-winged European hawk, Accipiter nisus, that preys on smaller birds.
  • star network — a circuit with three or more branches all of which have one common terminal.
  • streetworker — a social worker who works with youths of a neighborhood.
  • trickle-down — of, relating to, or based on the trickle-down theory: the trickle-down benefits to the local community.
  • turkey brown — an angler's name for a species of mayfly, Paraleptophlebia submarginata
  • wakeboarding — (sports) A water sport where a rider on a small board is towed by a motor boat, and attached by a cable.
  • waking hours — Your waking hours are the times when you are awake rather than asleep.
  • walk through — an act or instance of walking or going on foot.
  • walk-on part — acting role with no spoken lines
  • walk-through — Theater, Television. a rehearsal in which physical action is combined with reading the lines of a play. a perfunctory performance of a script.
  • walker hound — an American foxhound having a black, tan, and white, or, sometimes, a tan and white coat.
  • walking tour — a tour on which you walk rather than using transport
  • walkthroughs — Plural form of walkthrough.
  • water pocket — a cavity at the foot of a cliff formed by the falling action of an intermittent stream.
  • water worker — a person employed in the water industry
  • water-locked — enclosed entirely, or almost entirely, by water: a waterlocked nation.
  • weathercocks — Plural form of weathercock.
  • weavers-knot — sheet bend.
  • welfare work — the efforts or programs of an agency, community, business organization, etc., to improve living conditions, increase job opportunities, secure hospitalization, and the like, for needy persons within its jurisdiction.
  • whiskey sour — a cocktail made with whiskey, lemon juice, and sugar.
  • windsor knot — a wide, triangular knot for tying a four-in-hand necktie.
  • wonderstruck — (of a person) experiencing a sudden feeling of awed delight or wonder.
  • wonderworker — A person who performs miracles or wonders.
  • woodruff key — a key having the form of a nearly semicircular disk fitting into a recess in a shaft.
  • work station — a work or office area assigned to one person, often one accommodating a computer terminal or other electronic equipment.
  • work surface — A work surface is a flat surface, usually in a kitchen, which is easy to clean and on which you can do things such as prepare food.
  • work through — exertion or effort directed to produce or accomplish something; labor; toil.
  • work to rule — If workers work to rule, they protest by working according to the rules of their job without doing any extra work or taking any new decisions.
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