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

  • olive crown — (esp in ancient Greece and Rome) a garland of olive leaves awarded as a token of victory
  • on a downer — If you are on a downer, you are feeling depressed and without hope.
  • one-worlder — a person who supports or believes in any of various movements to establish a world government or a federation of nations stronger than any individual nation, for the purpose of promoting the common good.
  • orangewoman — a female member of the Orangemen
  • other woman — a woman who is romantically or sexually involved with another woman's husband or lover, especially a woman who is having an affair with a married man.
  • outswearing — Present participle of outswear.
  • outswingers — Plural form of outswinger.
  • outwardness — (uncountable) The quality of being outward.
  • over-sewing — to sew with stitches passing successively over an edge, especially closely, so as to cover the edge or make a firm seam.
  • overblowing — A technique for playing a wind instrument so as to produce overtones.
  • overdrawing — Present participle of overdraw.
  • overflowing — to flow or run over, as rivers or water: After the thaw, the river overflows and causes great damage.
  • oversweeten — to sweeten too much
  • overswollen — too swollen
  • overweening — presumptuously conceited, overconfident, or proud: a brash, insolent, overweening fellow.
  • overwritten — to write in too elaborate, burdensome, diffuse, or prolix a style: He overwrites his essays to the point of absurdity.
  • oxbow front — a front, as of a chest of drawers, having a curve with a concave section between two convex ones.
  • oxford-down1st Earl of, Harley, Robert.
  • oysterwoman — a woman who gathers, cultivates, or sells oysters.
  • patrolwoman — a policewoman who is assigned to patrol a specific district, route, etc.
  • pawnbroking — the business of a pawnbroker.
  • peanut worm — any small, unsegmented, marine worm of the phylum Sipuncula, that when disturbed retracts its anterior portion into the body, giving the appearance of a peanut seed.
  • personpower — the power or influence of a person
  • policyowner — policyholder.
  • polonnaruwa — a town in E central Sri Lanka: Buddhist ruins.
  • powder burn — a skin burn caused by exploding gunpowder.
  • powder down — modified down feathers that continually crumble at the tips, producing a fine powder that forms a bloom on the plumage of certain birds, as pigeons and herons.
  • powder horn — a powder flask made from the horn of a cow or ox.
  • powder snow — powder1 (def 3).
  • power brand — a brand of product that is a household name associated with a successful company
  • power chain — an endless chain for transmitting motion and power between sprockets on shafts with parallel axes.
  • power lunch — ability to do or act; capability of doing or accomplishing something.
  • power plant — a plant, including engines, dynamos, etc., and the building or buildings necessary for the generation of power, as electric or nuclear power.
  • power point — electrical socket
  • power train — a train of gears and shafting transmitting power from an engine, motor, etc., to a mechanism being driven.
  • powerdomain — (theory)   The powerdomain of a domain D is a domain containing some of the subsets of D. Due to the asymmetry condition in the definition of a partial order (and therefore of a domain) the powerdomain cannot contain all the subsets of D. This is because there may be different sets X and Y such that X <= Y and Y <= X which, by the asymmetry condition would have to be considered equal. There are at least three possible orderings of the subsets of a powerdomain: Egli-Milner: X <= Y iff for all x in X, exists y in Y: x <= y and for all y in Y, exists x in X: x <= y ("The other domain always contains a related element"). Hoare or Partial Correctness or Safety: X <= Y iff for all x in X, exists y in Y: x <= y ("The bigger domain always contains a bigger element"). Smyth or Total Correctness or Liveness: X <= Y iff for all y in Y, exists x in X: x <= y ("The smaller domain always contains a smaller element"). If a powerdomain represents the result of an abstract interpretation in which a bigger value is a safe approximation to a smaller value then the Hoare powerdomain is appropriate because the safe approximation Y to the powerdomain X contains a safe approximation to each point in X. ("<=" is written in LaTeX as \sqsubseteq).
  • pro-western — lying toward or situated in the west: our company's western office.
  • rain shadow — a region in the lee of mountains that receives less rainfall than the region windward of the mountains.
  • rain shower — a brief rainfall, usually of variable intensity.
  • rainbowlike — resembling a rainbow
  • random walk — Statistics. the path taken by a point or quantity that moves in steps, where the direction of each step is determined randomly.
  • rawoop-snap — (language)   An early system on the IBM 1130.
  • rear window — the window at the back of a motor vehicle
  • reason with — If you try to reason with someone, you try to persuade them to do or accept something by using sensible arguments.
  • reckon with — to count, compute, or calculate, as in number or amount.
  • reflowering — an occurrence of flowering again
  • repairwoman — a woman whose occupation is the making of repairs, readjustments, etc.
  • resort town — a holiday town
  • ribbon worm — any of various slender, unsegmented marine worms of the phylum Nemertea, being able to contract and stretch to an extreme extent.
  • robert owenSir Richard, 1804–92, English zoologist and anatomist.
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