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10-letter words containing w, o, l

  • renownedly — celebrated; famous.
  • ropewalker — a ropedancer.
  • rottweiler — one of a German breed of large, powerful dogs having a short, coarse, black coat with tan to brown markings.
  • rowlandsonThomas, 1756–1827, English caricaturist.
  • rubblework — masonry built of rubble or roughly dressed stones.
  • salad bowl — a large bowl in which a salad, especially a tossed salad, is served.
  • saleswoman — a woman who sells goods, services, etc.
  • sallowness — of a sickly, yellowish or lightish brown color: sallow cheeks; a sallow complexion.
  • sandalwood — the fragrant heartwood of any of certain Asian trees of the genus Santalum, used for ornamental carving and burned as incense.
  • savile row — a street in Mayfair, London, famous for expensive and fashionable clothes shops
  • scale down — a succession or progression of steps or degrees; graduated series: the scale of taxation; the social scale.
  • scapa flow — an area of water off the N coast of Scotland, in the Orkney Islands: British naval base; German warships scuttled 1919.
  • schoolward — towards or in the direction of school
  • schoolwork — the material studied in or for school, comprising homework and work done in class.
  • schwarzlot — a type of black decoration on German glassware and ceramics that was popular in the 17th and 18th centuries
  • scowlingly — in a scowling manner
  • scroll saw — a narrow saw mounted vertically in a frame and operated with an up-and-down motion, used for cutting curved ornamental designs.
  • scrollwise — like a scroll, in a way similar to a scroll
  • scrollwork — decorative work in which scroll forms figure prominently.
  • scrub fowl — megapode.
  • seal brown — a rich, dark brown suggestive of dressed and dyed sealskin.
  • self-worth — the sense of one's own value or worth as a person; self-esteem; self-respect.
  • self-wrong — wrong done to oneself.
  • shadowland — a land or region of shadows, phantoms, unrealities, or uncertainties: the shadowland of imagination.
  • shadowless — a dark figure or image cast on the ground or some surface by a body intercepting light.
  • shadowlike — a dark figure or image cast on the ground or some surface by a body intercepting light.
  • shallowest — of little depth; not deep: shallow water.
  • shopwalker — a floorwalker.
  • show a leg — to get up in the morning
  • show trial — (especially in a totalitarian state) the public trial of a political offender conducted chiefly for propagandistic purposes, as to suppress further dissent against the government by making an example of the accused.
  • show-place — an estate, mansion, or the like, usually open to the public, renowned for its beauty, excellent design and workmanship, historical interest, etc.
  • shower gel — liquid soap product
  • showerless — without showers; rain-free
  • shrew mole — a grayish-black mole, Neurotrichus gibbsii, of the western coast of the U.S. and Canada, that grows to a length of about 3 inches (7.6 cm).
  • silkgrower — a person who breeds silkworms for their silk
  • silverwork — fine or decorative work executed in silver.
  • simple vow — a public vow taken by a religious, under which property may be retained and marriage, though held to be illicit, is valid under canon law.
  • slide show — a presentation of photographic slides, or images on a transparent base, placed in a projector and viewed sequentially on a screen.
  • slow coach — a slowpoke.
  • slow loris — loris (def 2).
  • slow march — a march in slow time
  • slow match — a slow-burning match or fuse, often consisting of a rope or cord soaked in a solution of saltpeter.
  • slow pitch — a variety of softball in which the ball is pitched with an underhand motion at moderate speed in an arc that rises at least six feet above the ground
  • slow virus — a virus that remains dormant in the body for a long time before producing symptoms, as in several neurological diseases, including kuru and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.
  • slow-pitch — a type of softball with ten players per side and in which each pitch must travel in an arc from three to ten feet high.
  • sludgeworm — a small freshwater worm, Tubifex tubifex, often inhabiting sewage sludge and the muddy bottoms of lakes, rivers, and pools.
  • small town — Small town is used when referring to small places, usually in the United States, where people are friendly, honest, and polite, or to the people there. Small town is also sometimes used to suggest that someone has old-fashioned ideas.
  • small-town — of, relating to, or characteristic of a town or village: a typical, small-town general store.
  • smallsword — a light, tapering sword for thrusting, formerly used in fencing or dueling.
  • smallworld — (legal)   A trademark of Smallworldwide Plc..
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