10-letter words containing wo
- close work — work that involves focusing your eyes on a nearby object, such as a book or computer screen, for a prolonged period of time
- coatsworth — Elizabeth, 1893–1986, U.S. writer, especially of children's books.
- cockwomble — (UK,slang,derogatory) A foolish or obnoxious person.
- copperwork — a place where copper is worked
- copperworm — a shipworm, Teredo navalis
- cottonwood — A cottonwood or a cottonwood tree is a kind of tree that grows in North America and has seeds that are covered with hairs that look like cotton.
- cottonwool — Alternative form of cotton wool.
- coursework — written or oral work completed by a student within a given period, which is assessed as an integral part of an educational course
- crewelwork — embroidery done with crewel
- crosswords — Plural form of crossword.
- crotchwood — wood from a tree crotch, characterized by a swirling, irregular figure and used for furniture and veneers.
- currawongs — Plural form of currawong.
- curse word — a profane or obscene word, especially as used in anger or for emphasis.
- dairywoman — a woman who owns, manages, or works in a dairy.
- dairywomen — Plural form of dairywoman.
- devilwoods — Plural form of devilwood.
- dirty word — a vulgar or taboo word; obscenity.
- dirty work — disagreeable, often tedious tasks.
- disworship — to refuse to revere or worship
- do wonders — have a transforming effect
- dockworker — a person employed on the docks of a port, as in loading and unloading vessels.
- donkeywork — Informal. tedious, repetitious work; drudgery.
- doubleword — two bytes considered as a single storage entity, used in some high-level programming languages.
- drawn work — ornamental work done by drawing threads from a fabric, the remaining portions usually being formed into lacelike patterns by needlework.
- dreamworld — A fantastic or idealized view of life.
- drudgework — work that is menial and tedious and therefore distasteful; drudgery.
- dutchwoman — a female native or inhabitant of the Netherlands; a woman of Dutch ancestry.
- early wood — springwood.
- earthwoman — a female inhabitant or native of the planet Earth.
- earthwomen — Plural form of earthwoman.
- earthworks — Plural form of earthwork.
- earthworms — Plural form of earthworm.
- entry word — in book
- everywoman — a woman who exemplifies all women in some way
- exit wound — a wound caused by a missile, esp a bullet, leaving a person's body
- falseworks — Plural form of falsework.
- farmworker — farm hand.
- farnsworth — Philo Taylor [fahy-loh] /ˈfaɪ loʊ/ (Show IPA), 1906–71, U.S. physicist and inventor: pioneer in the field of television.
- feverworts — Plural form of feverwort.
- fiddlewood — the heavy, hard, durable wood of various West Indian and other trees.
- field work — Also, field work. work done in the field, as research, exploration, surveying, or interviewing: archaeological fieldwork.
- fieldworks — Plural form of fieldwork.
- figurework — work with figures or numbers
- fingerwork — Alternative spelling of finger work.
- flat-woven — (of a carpet) woven without pile
- floor-work — a sequence of exercises done at the beginning of a class or before a performance in sitting and supine positions on the floor in order to stretch and warm up the body.
- foilswoman — a woman who uses or specializes in using a foil
- fort worth — a city in N Texas.
- frameworks — Plural form of framework.
- free world — the nations of the world that function chiefly under democratic and capitalistic systems rather than under totalitarianism or Communism.