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11-letter words containing w, o, l, e

  • flower show — a display or exhibition, often competitive, of flowers and plants
  • flowerheads — Plural form of flowerhead.
  • floweriness — The quality of being flowery.
  • flowingness — the quality of being flowing
  • foamflowers — Plural form of foamflower.
  • followed by — You use followed by to say what comes after something else in a list or ordered set of things.
  • fowler flap — a flap normally forming a part of the trailing edge of an airplane wing, capable of being moved backward and rotated downward in order to increase lift through increased camber and wing area.
  • front vowel — a vowel sound produced with the tongue in a position near the front of the mouth, such as the 'a' in 'at' or the 'e' in bed
  • frostflower — a plant, Milla biflora, of the amaryllis family, native to the southwestern U.S. and Mexico.
  • furbelowing — Present participle of furbelow.
  • gallowsness — the quality of being bold or reckless
  • gentlewoman — a woman of good family, breeding, or social position.
  • gentlewomen — Plural form of gentlewoman.
  • gilliflower — any of several plants of various families with clove-scented flowers, as the carnation
  • gillyflower — Archaic. any of several fragrant flowers of the genus Dianthus, as the carnation or clove pink.
  • glassblower — A person skilled in the art of glassblowing.
  • glassworker — a person who makes or does glasswork.
  • globeflower — any of several plants belonging to the genus Trollius, of the buttercup family, as T. laxus, of North America, having rounded, yellowish flowers.
  • gobble down — eat hungrily
  • golden glow — a tall garden black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia laciniata) with numerous globular, yellow ray flower heads
  • good fellow — a friendly and pleasant person.
  • googlewhack — A Google search result consisting of a single hit, in response to a search on two separate words.
  • googlewhore — (Internet slang) To promote via Google; in particular, to do so by googlebombing.
  • grease wool — shorn fleece before it has been cleaned
  • greasy wool — untreated wool, still retaining the lanolin, which is used for waterproof clothing
  • great world — fashionable society and its way of life
  • grey willow — a species of willow, Salix cinerea, with greenish-grey catkins
  • groundswell — a broad, deep swell or rolling of the sea, due to a distant storm or gale.
  • guinea fowl — any of several African, gallinaceous birds of the subfamily Numidinae, especially a common species, Numida meleagris, that has a bony casque on the head and dark gray plumage spotted with white and that is now domesticated and raised for its flesh and eggs.
  • hail-fellow — Also, hail fellow, hail-fellow well met. a spiritedly sociable person; jolly companion.
  • hammer blow — a blow from a hammer
  • harrow hell — to enter hell and rescue the righteous
  • heart-whole — not in love.
  • hereinbelow — afterward in this document, statement, etc.
  • high blower — a horse that produces a blowing sound when exhaling.
  • high yellow — a term used to refer to a light-skinned black person.
  • hinshelwoodSir Cyril Norman, 1897–1967, English chemist: Nobel Prize 1956.
  • hollow tile — tile (def 5).
  • hollow-eyed — having sunken eyes.
  • holy willie — a person who is hypocritically pious
  • hooke's law — the law stating that the stress on a solid substance is directly proportional to the strain produced, provided the stress is less than the elastic limit of the substance.
  • hornswoggle — to swindle, cheat, hoodwink, or hoax.
  • housewifely — of, like, or befitting a housewife.
  • ice flowers — formations of ice crystals on the surface of a still, slowly freezing body of water.
  • inflow pipe — the pipe that brings water or gas into a place
  • interflowed — Simple past tense and past participle of interflow.
  • ithiel town — Ithiel [ith-ee-uh l] /ˈɪθ i əl/ (Show IPA), 1784–1844, U.S. architect.
  • jewelry box — case for valuable accessories
  • joel barlowJoel, 1754–1812, U.S. poet and diplomat.
  • joule's law — the principle that the rate of production of heat by a constant direct current is directly proportional to the resistance of the circuit and to the square of the current.
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