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11-letter words containing a, g, r, p, h

  • crescograph — an instrument for measuring plant growth
  • cryptograph — something written in code or cipher
  • cystography — radiography of the urinary bladder using a contrast medium
  • demographer — the science of vital and social statistics, as of the births, deaths, diseases, marriages, etc., of populations.
  • demographic — Demographic means relating to or concerning demography.
  • dermography — a type of marking on the skin, whether in the form of writing or pictures, supposedly of psychic origin, similar to stigmata except for being more short-lived
  • diaphragmic — Which uses, or which is located in or near, the diaphragm.
  • discography — a selective or complete list of phonograph recordings, typically of one composer, performer, or conductor.
  • diskography — discography.
  • dittography — reduplication of letters or syllables in writing, printing, etc., usually through error.
  • doxographer — a person who collects the opinions and conjectures of ancient Greek philosophers
  • dynamograph — a device for registering the quantity of force applied
  • epigraphist — A person who studies epigraphy (inscriptions).
  • ergatomorph — an ergatoid ant
  • ethnography — The scientific description of the customs of individual peoples and cultures.
  • euryphagous — eating a wide variety of foods
  • ferrography — the analysis of iron in lubricants in order to assess the extent of wear in a machine
  • filmography — a collection of writings about motion pictures, especially detailed essays dealing with specific films.
  • flexography — a relief printing technique similar to letterpress that employs rubber or soft plastic plates, a simple inking system, and fast-drying inks.
  • gametophore — a part or structure bearing gametangia.
  • 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.
  • gastropathy — (pathology) Any disease of the stomach.
  • gastrosophy — the science or art of good eating
  • generalship — skill as commander of a large military force or unit.
  • geographers — Plural form of geographer.
  • geographies — the science dealing with the areal differentiation of the earth's surface, as shown in the character, arrangement, and interrelations over the world of such elements as climate, elevation, soil, vegetation, population, land use, industries, or states, and of the unit areas formed by the complex of these individual elements.
  • germaphobia — Pathological fear of germs.
  • germaphobic — Alternative form of germophobic.
  • glyptograph — an engraved or carved design, as on a gem.
  • gopher ball — a pitched ball hit for a home run: leading the league in gopher balls.
  • gopherspace — (networking)   The sum of all files that can be reached using gopher.
  • gramophones — Plural form of gramophone.
  • grandnephew — a son of one's nephew or niece.
  • graph paper — paper printed with a pattern of straight or curved lines, especially a grid of small squares, for plotting or drawing graphs and curves.
  • graphically — giving a clear and effective picture; vivid: a graphic account of an earthquake.
  • graphicness — The quality of being graphic: grotesqueness or vividness.
  • graphitized — (chemistry, of carbon) Converted to graphite.
  • graphomania — The compulsion to write books.
  • graphomotor — pertaining to the muscular movements in writing.
  • graphophone — a phonograph for recording and reproducing sounds on wax records.
  • grasshopper — any of numerous herbivorous, orthopterous insects, especially of the families Acrididae and Tettigoniidae, having the hind legs adapted for leaping and having chewing mouth parts, some species being highly destructive to vegetation. Compare locust (def 1), long-horned grasshopper.
  • gravisphere — the area in which the gravitational force of a celestial body is predominant.
  • hagiographa — the third of the three Jewish divisions of the Old Testament, variously arranged, but usually comprising the Psalms, Proverbs, Job, Song of Solomon, Ruth, Lamentations, Ecclesiastes, Esther, Daniel, Ezra, Nehemiah, and Chronicles.
  • hagiography — the writing and critical study of the lives of the saints; hagiology.
  • hairsprings — Plural form of hairspring.
  • handsprings — Plural form of handspring.
  • haplography — the accidental omission of a letter or letter group that should be repeated in writing, as in Missippi for Mississippi.
  • haplogroups — Plural form of haplogroup.
  • hardscaping — Hardscape.
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