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10-letter words containing a, d, h, e, r, n

  • enthraldom — the condition of being enthralled
  • enthralled — Capture the fascinated attention of.
  • enwreathed — Simple past tense and past participle of enwreathe.
  • fatherland — one's native country.
  • forehanded — forehand (def 1).
  • franchised — Simple past tense and past participle of franchise.
  • freehanded — Openhanded; generous.
  • fringehead — any fish of the genus Neoclinus, characterized by a row of fleshy processes on the head, as N. blanchardi (sarcastic fringehead) of California coastal waters.
  • gardenhood — The state of being a garden; the status, respect, or appearance befitting a proper garden.
  • garnisheed — Simple past tense and past participle of garnishee.
  • greenheads — Plural form of greenhead.
  • had sooner — would rather; would prefer to
  • hag-ridden — worried or tormented, as by a witch.
  • hand brake — a brake operated by a hand lever. Compare caliper (def 6).
  • hand cream — a cream that you put on your hands to make them feel softer and smoother
  • hand mower — a lawn mower that is pushed by hand (distinguished from power mower).
  • hand press — a printing press requiring hand operation.
  • hand screw — a screw that can be tightened by the fingers, without the aid of a tool.
  • hand-drier — an electrical appliance, usually found in public toilets, that dries a person's hands through the expulsion of hot air
  • handballer — A handball player.
  • handbrakes — Plural form of handbrake.
  • handlanger — an unskilled assistant to a tradesman
  • handlebars — Usually, handlebars. the curved steering bar of a bicycle, motorcycle, etc., placed in front of the rider and gripped by the hands. handlebar moustache.
  • hands-free — not requiring the use of the hands: handsfree telephone dialing by voice commands.
  • handshaker — a person who is or is required to be overtly or ostentatiously friendly: Politicians are often incurable handshakers.
  • handstroke — the downward movement of the bell rope as the bell swings around allowing the ringer to grasp and pull it
  • handwarmer — a small, flat, usually pocket-size device containing material, as chemicals, hot liquids, or a battery-operated heating element, for warming the hands.
  • hansardize — to prove that (a member of parliament) has changed his views from those quoted in Hansard
  • hard lines — bad luck
  • hard money — (in the US) money given directly to a candidate in an election to assist his or her campaign
  • hard-liner — a person who adheres rigidly to a dogma, theory, or plan.
  • hard-nosed — hardheaded or tough; unsentimentally practical: a hard-nosed labor leader.
  • harden off — to accustom (a cultivated plant) or (of such a plant) to become accustomed to outdoor conditions by repeated exposure
  • hardenable — to make hard or harder: to harden steel.
  • hardenberg — Novalis.
  • hardhanded — Forceful, excessive, draconian, or abusive.
  • hardliners — Plural form of hardliner.
  • hardnesses — the state or quality of being hard: the hardness of ice.
  • harmonised — Simple past tense and past participle of harmonise.
  • harmonized — Add notes to (a melody) to produce harmony.
  • head nurse — the chief nurse in a hospital; matron
  • headbanger — metalhead.
  • headhunter — a person who engages in headhunting.
  • headliners — Plural form of headliner.
  • headspring — the fountainhead or source of a stream.
  • headstrong — determined to have one's own way; willful; stubborn; obstinate: a headstrong young man.
  • heartlands — Plural form of heartland.
  • heavenward — Also, heavenwards. toward heaven.
  • henry dale — Sir Henry Hallett [hal-it] /ˈhæl ɪt/ (Show IPA), 1875–1968, English physiologist: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1936.
  • herdswoman — The female equivalent of a herdsman.
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