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11-letter words containing w, o, n, d

  • sword-point — the point of a sword
  • swordswoman — a female who uses or is skilled in the use of a sword.
  • tae kwon do — a Korean martial art, a particularly aggressive form of karate, that utilizes punches, jabs, chops, blocking and choking moves, and especially powerful, leaping kicks.
  • the wounded — persons wounded, esp. in warfare
  • thistledown — the mature, silky pappus of a thistle.
  • thumbs down — the short, thick, inner digit of the human hand, next to the forefinger.
  • thumbs-down — an act or instance of dissent, disapproval, etc.
  • to run wild — If something or someone, especially a child, runs wild, they behave in a natural, free, or uncontrolled way.
  • to windward — toward the wind; toward the point from which the wind blows.
  • tradeswoman — a woman engaged in trade.
  • trickledown — of, relating to, or based on the trickle-down theory: the trickle-down benefits to the local community.
  • tumble down — collapse, fall
  • tumble-down — dilapidated; ruined; rundown: He lived in a tumble-down shack.
  • twenty-fold — having twenty sections, aspects, divisions, kinds, etc.
  • twofoldness — the quality or state of being twofold
  • un-showered — a brief fall of rain or, sometimes, of hail or snow.
  • undergrowth — low-lying vegetation or small trees growing beneath larger trees; underbrush.
  • underworked — to do less work on than is necessary or required: to underwork an idea.
  • underworker — a person who underworks
  • unempowered — to give power or authority to; authorize, especially by legal or official means: I empowered my agent to make the deal for me. The local ordinance empowers the board of health to close unsanitary restaurants.
  • unswallowed — not swallowed
  • unwithstood — not opposed or resisted; not withstood
  • unwoundable — incapable of being wounded, injured, or harmed
  • up and down — moving in or related to a direction that is up or is regarded as up: the up elevator; the up train traveling north; the up platform of a railroad station.
  • up-and-down — moving alternately up and down: the up-and-down swing of levers; an up-and-down tune.
  • upside down — with the upper part undermost.
  • vent window — (on an automobile) a small, pivoting window fitted into a main side window to provide draft-free ventilation.
  • vowel sound — spoken language: open sound
  • wading pool — a small, shallow pool for children to wade and play in.
  • wainscotted — Having a wainscot.
  • wait around — If you wait around or wait about, you stay in the same place, usually doing very little, because you cannot act before something happens or before someone arrives.
  • walden pond — a pond in NE Massachusetts, near Concord: site of Thoreau's cottage and inspiration for his book Walden, or Life in the Woods.
  • wallingford — a town in S Connecticut.
  • watt-second — a unit of energy equal to the energy of one watt acting for one second; the equivalent of one joule.
  • weight down — If you weight something down, you put something heavy on it or in it in order to prevent it from moving easily.
  • welding rod — filler metal supplied in the form of a rod, usually coated with flux
  • well-bonded — secured by or consisting of bonds: bonded debt.
  • wellfounded — (math) Alternative form of well-founded.
  • wendy house — a child's playhouse.
  • west jordan — a town in N central Utah.
  • westmorland — a former county in NW England, now part of Cumbria, partially in the Lake District.
  • whangdoodle — a fanciful creature of undefined nature.
  • whiskerando — a man with extravagant whiskers
  • whit monday — the Monday following Whitsunday.
  • white sound — white noise.
  • whodunnitry — the style or genre of novels, plays, etc concerned with crime
  • widow woman — a widow.
  • wild indigo — any of several plants belonging to the genus Baptisia, of the legume family, especially B. tinctoria, having yellow flowers.
  • wild orange — laurel cherry.
  • wildfowling — Present participle of wildfowl.
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