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14-letter words containing w, o, m, a, n

  • mowing machine — a machine for mowing or cutting down grass, grain, etc.
  • new journalism — journalism containing the writer's personal opinions and reactions and often fictional asides as added color.
  • new model army — the army established in 1645 during the Civil War by the English parliamentarians, which exercised considerable political power under Cromwell
  • newspaperwoman — a woman employed by a newspaper or wire service as a reporter, writer, editor, etc.
  • newspaperwomen — Plural form of newspaperwoman.
  • no matter what — whatever
  • old low german — the language of the German lowlands before c1100. Abbreviation: OLG.
  • one-way mirror — a sheet of glass that can be seen through from one side and is a mirror on the other, used especially for observation of criminal suspects by law-enforcement officials or witnesses.
  • one-woman show — a show or performance performed by one woman
  • panoramic view — wide vista or landscape
  • parchment worm — any of several polychaete worms of the genus Chaetopterus that secrete and live in a U -shaped, parchmentlike tube.
  • reach-me-downs — trousers
  • rowing machine — an exercise machine having a mechanism with two oarlike handles, foot braces, and a sliding seat, allowing the user to go through the motions of rowing in a racing shell.
  • shallow-minded — lacking intellectual or mental depth or subtlety; superficial
  • snowy mountain — of or relating to the Snowy Mountains of Australia or their inhabitants
  • sowing machine — a machine that scatters seeds on land so that they may grow
  • swanscombe man — a primitive human, Homo sapiens steinheimensis, of the middle Pleistocene Epoch, known from a fossil skull fragment found at Swanscombe, England.
  • tasmanian wolf — thylacine.
  • transom window — a window divided by a transom.
  • two-name paper — commercial paper having more than one obligor, usually a maker and endorser, both of whom are fully liable.
  • vowel mutation — umlaut (def 2).
  • water moccasin — the cottonmouth.
  • welsh mountain — a common breed of small hardy sheep kept mainly in the mountains of Wales
  • west glamorgan — a county in S Wales. 315 sq. mi. (815 sq. km).
  • what manner of — You use what manner of to suggest that the person or thing you are about to mention is of an unusual or unknown kind.
  • white mahogany — an Australian eucalyptus, Eucalyptus acmenioides.
  • william bowmanWilliam Scott ("Scotty") born 1933, Canadian hockey coach.
  • william gibson — (person)   Author of cyberpunk novels such as Neuromancer (1984), Count Zero (1986), Mona Lisa Overdrive, and Virtual Light (1993). Neuromancer, a novel about a computer hacker/criminal "cowboy" of the future helping to free an artificial intelligence from its programmed bounds, won the Hugo and Nebula science fiction awards and is credited as the seminal cyberpunk novel and the origin of the term "cyberspace". Gibson does not have a technical background and supposedly purchased his first computer in 1992.
  • wing commander — British. an officer in the Royal Air Force equivalent in rank to a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Air Force.
  • with open arms — the upper limb of the human body, especially the part extending from the shoulder to the wrist.
  • woman suffrage — the right of women to vote; female suffrage.
  • woman-to-woman — characterized by directness, openness, etc., between women.
  • word formation — the formation of words, for example by adding prefixes or suffixes to roots
  • work placement — temporary job, internship
  • world champion — someone who has won a competition open to people throughout the whole world
  • wyoming valley — a valley in NE Pennsylvania, along the Susquehanna River: Indian massacre 1778.
  • yellow jasmine — Carolina jessamine.
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