0%

11-letter words containing a, h, e, r, t, o

  • leatherwood — an American shrub, Dirca palustris, having a tough bark.
  • leatherwork — work or decoration done in leather.
  • leavenworth — a city in NE Kansas.
  • light opera — operetta.
  • lionhearted — exceptionally courageous or brave.
  • logotherapy — (psychotherapy) A therapy that involves finding the meaning of one's life.
  • lone father — a father with no wife or partner, who is bringing up a child or children
  • lycanthrope — a person affected with lycanthropy.
  • lythraceous — belonging to the Lythraceae, the loosestrife family of plants.
  • macrophytes — Plural form of macrophyte.
  • mechatronic — relating to mechatronics
  • merthiolate — thimerosal
  • mesotherapy — a cosmetic procedure in which minute doses of medication, vitamins, etc, are injected repeatedly into the mesodermal tissue under the skin to promote fat loss
  • metachronal — Describing the wavelike beating of a group of cilia.
  • metachrosis — the ability of some animals, such as chameleons, to change their colour
  • metamorphic — pertaining to or characterized by change of form, or metamorphosis.
  • metanephroi — Plural form of metanephros.
  • metanephros — one of the three embryonic excretory organs of higher vertebrates, becoming the permanent and functional kidney.
  • metaphorist — a creator or user of metaphors
  • metaphorize — To describe something using metaphors.
  • metatrophic — requiring dead organic matter for food.
  • misanthrope — a comedy (1666) by Molière.
  • monohydrate — a hydrate that contains one molecule of water, as ammonium carbonate, (NH 4) 2 CO 3 ·H 2 O.
  • monotherapy — (medicine) A therapy which is administered by itself.
  • montherlant — Henry de [ahn-ree duh] /ɑ̃ˈri də/ (Show IPA), 1896–1972, French author.
  • motherboard — a rigid, slotted board upon which other boards that contain the basic circuitry of a computer or of a computer component can be mounted. Compare board (def 14).
  • mothercraft — skill and knowledge in looking after children
  • motherlands — Plural form of motherland.
  • neanthropic — of or relating to modern forms of humans as compared with extinct species of the genus Homo.
  • nematomorph — any member of the phylum Nematomorpha, having a threadlike body, comprising the horsehair worms.
  • nematophore — (within the coenosarc of certain colonial hydrozoans) a small specialized tentacle-like polyp having nematocysts
  • nephropathy — any disease of the kidney.
  • neuropathic — any diseased condition of the nervous system.
  • nitroethane — (organic compound) The aliphatic nitro compound CH3-CH2-NO2 that is used as a specialist solvent, and as a fuel additive.
  • nonadherent — That does not adhere.
  • nonahydrate — (chemistry) A hydrate whose solid contains nine molecules of water of crystallization per molecule, or per unit cell.
  • north haven — a town in S Connecticut.
  • north korea — a country in E Asia: formed 1948 after the division of the former country of Korea at 38° N. 50,000 sq. mi. (129,500 sq. km). Capital: Pyongyang. Compare Korea.
  • northeaster — New England and South Atlantic States. a wind or gale from the northeast.
  • northlander — the land or region in the north.
  • not hear of — to forbid or refuse to consider
  • oak leather — a thick sheet of mycelium occurring in decayed oak wood.
  • oathbreaker — Someone who breaks an oath.
  • octahedrite — anatase.
  • octahedrons — Plural form of octahedron.
  • octahydrate — (chemistry) A hydrate whose solid contains eight molecules of water of crystallization per molecule, or per unit cell.
  • off the air — a mixture of nitrogen, oxygen, and minute amounts of other gases that surrounds the earth and forms its atmosphere.
  • ommatophore — a tentacle or movable stalk bearing an eye, as in certain snails.
  • on the rack — If you say that someone is on the rack, you mean that they are suffering either physically or mentally.
  • on the road — a novel (1957) by Jack Kerouac.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?