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9-letter words containing a, l, e, p, h

  • feldspath — Alternative form of feldspar.
  • fishplate — a metal or wooden plate or slab, bolted to each of two members that have been butted or lapped together.
  • galumphed — Simple past tense and past participle of galumph.
  • galumpher — a person or animal that leaps or moves heavily or clumsily
  • glidepath — the course followed by an aircraft or spacecraft when descending for a landing.
  • halazepam — a derivative of benzodiazepine, C 17 H 12 ClF 3 N 2 O, used for management of anxiety disorders.
  • half step — Music. semitone.
  • half-open — (of a file) having a pawn or pawns of only one colour on it
  • half-pace — a small stage on which something stands
  • half-peck — a unit of dry measure equal to 4 quarts (4.4 liters).
  • half-pike — spontoon.
  • half-pipe — a half-moon-shaped chute or ramp used by snowboarders and skateboarders to provide a takeoff for a jump.
  • half-step — Music. semitone.
  • halfpence — Plural form of halfpenny.
  • halfpenny — a bronze coin of the United Kingdom, equal to half a penny: use phased out in 1984.
  • halfpipes — Plural form of halfpipe.
  • halophile — any organism, as certain halobacteria and marine bacteria, that requires a salt-rich environment for its growth and survival.
  • halophobe — a creature that is unable to live in salty conditions
  • halophyte — a plant that thrives in saline soil.
  • haplessly — In a hapless manner.
  • haplotype — Genetics. a combination of closely linked DNA sequences on one chromosome that are often inherited together: By comparing haplotypes of a mother and father with those of a fetus, scientists can study how new genetic changes arise.
  • harp seal — a northern earless seal, Pagophilus groenlandicus, with pale-yellow fur darkening to gray with age, of coasts, drifting ice, and seas of the North Atlantic Ocean, hunted for its fur.
  • harpylike — resembling a harpy
  • headlamps — Plural form of headlamp.
  • heat lamp — a lamp fitted with an infrared bulb to supply heat especially as part of physical therapy.
  • heelplate — a small metal plate attached to the heel of a shoe to protect it against excessive wear.
  • hellspawn — (fantasy) A creature or creatures from Hell.
  • helpmates — (British) Plural form of helpmate.
  • heptaglot — a book written in seven languages
  • heptalogy — (rare) # A set of seven works of art that are connected, and that can be seen either as a single work or as seven individual works. They are commonly found in literature, film, or video games.
  • hexaploid — having a chromosome number that is six times the haploid number.
  • hexapodal — of or relating to the hexapods
  • homeplace — a person's birthplace or family home.
  • horseplay — rough or boisterous play or pranks.
  • hospitale — a place of lodging
  • hot plate — a portable appliance for cooking, formerly heated by a gas burner placed underneath it, now heated chiefly by an electrical unit in the appliance.
  • hotplates — Plural form of hotplate.
  • hourplate — the dial of a clock or watch
  • hypallage — the reversal of the expected syntactic relation between two words, as in “her beauty's face” for “her face's beauty.”.
  • hyperbola — the set of points in a plane whose distances to two fixed points in the plane have a constant difference; a curve consisting of two distinct and similar branches, formed by the intersection of a plane with a right circular cone when the plane makes a greater angle with the base than does the generator of the cone. Equation: x 2 /a 2 − y 2 /b 2 = ±1.
  • hyperreal — Exaggerated in comparison to reality.
  • hypertalk — A verbose semicompiled language by Bill Atkinson and Dan Winkler, with loose syntax and high readability. HyperTalk uses HyperCard as an object management system, development environment and interface builder. Programs are organised into "stacks" of "cards", each of which may have "buttons" and "fields". All data storage is in zero-terminated strings in fields, local, or global variables; all data references are through "chunk expressions" of the form: 'last item of background field "Name List" of card ID 34217'. Flow of control is event-driven and uses message-passing among scripts that are attached to stack, background, card, field and button objects.
  • hypethral — (of a classical building) wholly or partly open to the sky.
  • lamp-hole — a hole in the ground for lowering a lamp down into a sewer
  • lampshade — a shade, usually translucent or opaque, for shielding the glare of a light source in a lamp or for directing the light to a particular area.
  • lampshell — Alternative form of lamp shell.
  • lexigraph — A lexigram or ideograph, a graphical depiction of a single word.
  • lexiphage — (graphics)   /lek'si-fayj"/ A notorious word chomper, implemented and named by John Doty in late 1972 on and HP calculator and later on ITS. The lexiphage program would draw on a selected victim's bitmapped terminal the words "THE BAG" in ornate letters, followed a pair of jaws biting pieces of it off.
  • lexiphane — One who uses words pretentiously.
  • machpelah — the site of a cave, probably in the ancient city of Hebron, where Abraham, Sarah, Rebekah, Isaac, Jacob, and Leah were buried. Gen. 23:19; 25:9; 49:30; 50:13.
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