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10-letter words containing win

  • right wing — members of a conservative or reactionary political party, or those opposing extensive political reform.
  • right-wing — members of a conservative or reactionary political party, or those opposing extensive political reform.
  • screwiness — the state or quality of being screwy
  • sewing bee — a small informal social gathering (usually of women) based around the activity of making or mending clothes or other things with a needle and thread
  • sewing kit — A sewing kit is a small package containing items, such as needles and thread, that you need to sew something.
  • shawinigan — a city in S Quebec, in E Canada.
  • shopwindow — a window used for display of merchandise.
  • sidewinder — a severe swinging blow from the side.
  • sinewiness — having strong sinews: a sinewy back.
  • solar wind — an emanation from the sun's corona consisting of a flow of charged particles, mainly electrons and protons, that interacts with the magnetic field of the earth and other planetary bodies.
  • split-wing — of or relating to wings (of an artificial fly) that are dressed cocked up and separated into a V shape
  • sqlwindows — (programming, product)   A package used to graphically develop MS-Windows client-server applications. Sold by Gupta Corporation.
  • stemwinder — a stemwinding watch.
  • still wine — any nonsparkling table wine.
  • straw wine — a usually rich or sweet wine produced from grapes partially dried on the vine or picked and dried in the sun on a bed of straw or reeds.
  • swinestone — a type of limestone that emits an unpleasant odour when rubbed or struck
  • swing band — a band that plays swing jazz
  • swing door — a door that swings open on being pushed or pulled from either side and then swings closed by itself.
  • swing loan — a bridge loan.
  • swing pass — a pass thrown to a receiver, usually a running back, who is running toward a sideline
  • swing vote — to cause to move to and fro, sway, or oscillate, as something suspended from above: to swing one's arms in walking.
  • swing-wing — (of an airplane) having wings whose horizontal angle to the fuselage centerline can be adjusted fore and aft to optimize aerodynamic performance at widely differing speeds.
  • swinglebar — a whiffletree.
  • swinnerton — Frank (Arthur) 1884–1982, English novelist and critic.
  • table wine — a wine that contains not more than 14 percent alcohol and is usually served as an accompaniment to food.
  • tiddlywink — Tiddlywinks is a game in which the players try to make small round pieces of plastic jump into a container, by pressing their edges with a larger piece of plastic.
  • tonic wine — a wine, usually fortified, generally consumed for its supposed invigorating effects
  • trade wind — Also, trade winds. Also called trades. any of the nearly constant easterly winds that dominate most of the tropics and subtropics throughout the world, blowing mainly from the northeast in the Northern Hemisphere, and from the southeast in the Southern Hemisphere.
  • twin falls — a city in S Idaho.
  • twin peaks — a mountain in central Idaho: highest peak in the Salmon River Mountains. 10,340 feet (3154 meters).
  • twin-screw — (of a vessel) having two screw propellers, which usually revolve in opposite directions.
  • twin-track — involving two simultaneous actions or processes
  • twinflower — either of two slender, creeping, evergreen, caprifoliaceous plants, Linnaea borealis, of Europe, or L. americana, of North America, having pink or purplish nodding flowers borne in pairs on threadlike stalks.
  • unwinnable — that can be won: a winnable war.
  • unwinnowed — (of grain, corn, etc) not winnowed; not separated from the chaff
  • upgrowings — instances of growing upwards
  • urban wind — a turbulent wind at street level around tall structures in a city, characterized by a warming of the air by the heat output from these structures.
  • whipsawing — Present participle of whipsaw.
  • whirlwinds — Plural form of whirlwind.
  • white wine — wine having a yellowish to amber color derived from the light-colored grapes used in production, or from dark grapes whose skins, pulp, and seeds have been removed before fermentation.
  • winceyette — a plain-weave cotton fabric with slightly raised two-sided nap
  • winchester — (in the Middle Ages) a kingdom, later an earldom, in S England. Capital: Winchester.
  • wind chest — a chamber containing the air supply for the reeds or pipes of an organ.
  • wind chill — the apparent temperature felt on the exposed human body owing to the combination of temperature and wind speed.
  • wind colic — flatulence caused by gases that result from the eating of fermenting vegetation; bloat.
  • wind gauge — anemometer.
  • wind plant — a grouping of devices, consisting of a tower, propellers, alternator, generator, and storage batteries, designed to produce electricity by converting the mechanical force of wind on blades or a rotor into electricity.
  • wind poppy — a Californian plant, Stylomecon heterophylla, of the poppy family, having satiny, brick-red flowers with purple centers.
  • wind power — power derived from wind: used to generate electricity or mechanical power.
  • wind river — a river in W central Wyoming, flowing SE and joining the Popo Agie River to form the Bighorn River. 120 miles (193 km) long.
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