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white paper |
an official report published by a government agency. [2 definitions] |
white pepper |
a condiment with a sharp flavor prepared by grinding the inner fruit of the East Indian pepper. |
white pine |
a pine of eastern North America that has needles in bundles of five and soft, light wood. [2 definitions] |
white poplar |
a poplar of Europe and Asia, now widely cultivated in the United States, that bears leaves with white or gray down on the undersides. |
white sale |
a sale of sheets, pillowcases, and other household linens. |
white sauce |
a sauce for vegetables, meat, fish, and the like, made of butter, flour, milk, stock, and seasonings. |
white shark |
a very large shark of warm and tropical seas, known to attack humans; great white shark. |
white supremacy |
the belief or doctrine that the white race is naturally superior to other races, esp. blacks, and therefore has the right to dominate and exploit them socially, economically, and politically. |
white-tailed deer |
a common North American deer, having a tail with a white underside. |
white tie |
a man's white bow tie, worn with formal evening dress. [2 definitions] |
white trash |
(offensive slang) one or more members of the class of poor whites, esp. in the South. |
whitewall |
a tire, as for an automobile, with a white band on the side facing outward. |
whitewash |
a coating usu. made of lime and water, applied to walls, fences, or foundations as a whitener. [6 definitions] |
white water |
foaming white water, esp. as seen in rapids. [2 definitions] |
white-water |
of or relating to recreational canoeing, rafting, or the like, on rivers with rapids. |
white whale |
see "beluga." |
whitey |
(derogatory slang) a white person, or whites collectively. |
whither |
to what place? where?. [3 definitions] |
whiting1 |
any of several food fishes found off the coast of Europe that are related to cod. [2 definitions] |
whiting2 |
pure white chalk, ground and washed, used to make whitewash, ink, putty, and the like. |
whitish |
tending towards white, whiteness, or paleness; rather white. |
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