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

  • dog handler — a member of the police force, a security organization, etc, who works in collaboration with a specially trained dog
  • door handle — doorknob.
  • downhearted — dejected; depressed; discouraged.
  • dragon-head — dragonhead.
  • draughtsmen — Plural form of draughtsman.
  • dreadnaught — a type of battleship armed with heavy-caliber guns in turrets: so called from the British battleship Dreadnought, launched in 1906, the first of its type.
  • dreadnought — a type of battleship armed with heavy-caliber guns in turrets: so called from the British battleship Dreadnought, launched in 1906, the first of its type.
  • drive chain — a roller chain that transmits power from one toothed wheel to another
  • dunderheads — Plural form of dunderhead.
  • enchondroma — A cartilage cyst found in the bone marrow.
  • endothermal — Endothermic.
  • enheartened — Simple past tense and past participle of enhearten.
  • enneahedron — a solid figure having nine plane faces
  • enthralldom — The act of enthralling, or the state of being enthralled; slavery; bondage.
  • face-harden — to harden the surface of (metal), as by chilling or casehardening.
  • fatherlands — Plural form of fatherland.
  • fish warden — a public official who enforces game laws relating to fish.
  • four-handed — involving four hands or players, as a game at cards: Bridge is usually a four-handed game.
  • free-handed — generous; liberal.
  • garden hose — tube for spraying plants with water
  • garden path — paved walkway
  • garden-path — noting or pertaining to a sentence that is easily parsed incorrectly because its beginning suggests it has an interpretation that it clearly does not have.
  • glad-hander — to greet warmly.
  • grab handle — A grab handle is a handle on the side of an object such as a bathtub that you hold in order to help you get in and out.
  • grand haven — a city in W Michigan.
  • grand theft — stealing large amount
  • grandfather — the father of one's father or mother.
  • grandmother — the mother of one's father or mother.
  • grandnephew — a son of one's nephew or niece.
  • groundshare — to share the facilities and running costs of a single stadium with another team
  • haggardness — having a gaunt, wasted, or exhausted appearance, as from prolonged suffering, exertion, or anxiety; worn: the haggard faces of the tired troops.
  • hairbrained — giddy; reckless.
  • half-ruinedruins, the remains of a building, city, etc., that has been destroyed or that is in disrepair or a state of decay: We visited the ruins of ancient Greece.
  • hammer down — a tool consisting of a solid head, usually of metal, set crosswise on a handle, used for beating metals, driving nails, etc.
  • hammer pond — an artificial pond for maintaining a head of water at a water mill.
  • hamstringed — (in humans and other primates) any of the tendons that bound the ham of the knee.
  • hand-letter — to print by hand: She hand-lettered a “for sale” sign.
  • hand-reared — (of an animal or bird) kept and looked after by a person, rather than by its mother, when young
  • hand-worker — a person who does handwork
  • handbreadth — a unit of linear measure from 2½ to 4 inches (6.4 to 10 cm).
  • handcrafted — handicraft.
  • handcrafter — One who handcrafts or engages in handcraft or handicraft.
  • handicapper — Horse Racing. a racetrack official or employee who assigns the weight a horse must carry in a race. a person employed, as by a newspaper, to make predictions on the outcomes of horse races.
  • handwringer — a person who wrings the hands often as a display of worry or upset
  • handwritten — to write (something) by hand.
  • handyperson — a person who is practiced at doing maintenance work.
  • hang glider — a kitelike glider consisting of a V -shaped wing underneath which the pilot is strapped: kept aloft by updrafts and guided by the pilot's shifting body weight.
  • hang-glider — a kitelike glider consisting of a V -shaped wing underneath which the pilot is strapped: kept aloft by updrafts and guided by the pilot's shifting body weight.
  • harbingered — Simple past tense and past participle of harbinger.
  • hard-bitten — tough; stubborn.
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