The Collaborative International Dictionary
White-water \White"-wa`ter\, n. (Far.) A dangerous disease of sheep.
Usage examples of "white-water".
Many wore the silver fleur-de-lys suspended from the white-watered ribbon, which had not yet wholly disappeared from button-holes in the year 1817.
The River Thuler, no longer a placid stream, rushed over its rocky bed in white-watered energy.
She loved roller coasters and white-water rafting and had even toyed with the idea, during high school, of working on a bomb squad.
He can go surfboarding, rollerblading, waterskiing, rally-driving, scuba-diving, ten-pin bowling, white-water rafting and rowing.
In two minutes, the water at the camp was a boiling, turbulent flow of fearsome waves and white-water spray.
Running rapids in a raft under the sun and blue sky is called white-water rafting, his exhausted mind deliberated.
He had moved back in with his mother, who at the time was white-water rafting in Colorado.
At seventy-four, disregarding warning periods of little feeling in her legs, she went out to assess the strength needed for white-water rafting in southern stretches of the Colorado river.
Then she's going to go white-water rafting and read a scripted speech about the importance of wild rivers.