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11-letter words containing whit

  • white trash — a member of the class of poor whites, especially in the southern U.S.
  • white volta — a river in W Africa, in Ghana: a branch of the Volta River. About 550 miles (885 km) long. Compare Volta (def 2).
  • white water — fast-moving foamy water
  • white wavey — See under wavey.
  • white whale — beluga (def 2).
  • white witch — a witch who uses magic for benevolent purposes or without malicious intent
  • white-bread — pertaining to or characteristic of the white middle class; bourgeois: a typical white-bread suburban neighborhood.
  • white-faced — having a white or pale face.
  • white-glove — meticulous; painstaking; minute: a white-glove inspection.
  • white-robed — clothed in a white robe.
  • whiteboards — Plural form of whiteboard.
  • whiteboyism — the principles or conduct of the Whiteboys
  • whitechapel — a district in E London, England.
  • whitefeller — (Australia) A white settler in Australia; a non-Aboriginal Australian; often used attributively.
  • whitefishes — Plural form of whitefish.
  • whitefriars — a district in central London, England.
  • whiteprints — Plural form of whiteprint.
  • whitesmiths — Plural form of whitesmith.
  • whitethorns — Plural form of whitethorn.
  • whitethroat — any of several small songbirds having a throat that is white, especially an Old World warbler, Sylvia communis.
  • whitewashed — Simple past tense and past participle of whitewash.
  • whitewasher — One who, or that which, whitewashes.
  • whitewashes — Plural form of whitewash.
  • whitewaters — a town in SE Wisconsin.
  • whitherward — toward what place; in what direction.
  • whitishness — The quality of being whitish.
  • whitleather — white leather.
  • whitley bay — a resort in NE England, in North Tyneside unitary authority, Tyne and Wear, on the North Sea. Pop: 36 544 (2001)
  • whitlowwort — any of several small, tufted plants belonging to the genus Paronychia, of the pink family, native to temperate and warm regions, having opposite or whorled leaves and tiny, greenish flowers.
  • whitsuntide — the week beginning with Whitsunday, especially the first three days of this week.
  • whittingtonRichard ("Dick") 1358?–1423, English merchant and philanthropist: Lord Mayor of London 1398, 1406–07, 1419–20.
  • whittuesday — the day following Whitmonday.
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