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15-letter words containing a, n, g, s, h, o

  • sporting chance — an even or fair opportunity for a favorable outcome in an enterprise, as winning in a game of chance or in any kind of contest: They gave the less experienced players a sporting chance by handicapping the experts.
  • start something — to cause a disturbance or trouble
  • step on the gas — accelerate, drive faster
  • stop at nothing — to be prepared to do anything; be unscrupulous or ruthless
  • swing both ways — to enjoy sexual partners of both sexes
  • teng hsiao-ping — Deng Xiaoping.
  • thanks offering — an offering made as an expression of thanks to God
  • the anglo-irish — the inhabitants of Ireland of English birth or descent
  • to change hands — When something changes hands, its ownership changes, usually because it is sold to someone else.
  • toughened glass — glass that has been made stronger using chemical or thermal treatments so that it will not break easily
  • training school — a school that provides training in some art, profession, or vocation.
  • ultrasonography — a diagnostic imaging technique utilizing reflected high-frequency sound waves to delineate, measure, or examine internal body structures or organs.
  • vanishing point — a point of disappearance, cessation, or extinction: His patience had reached the vanishing point.
  • washing-up bowl — plastic bowl used for washing dishes
  • washington lily — a lily, Lilium washingtonianum, of the western coast of the U.S., having whorled leaves and fragrant, purple-spotted white flowers.
  • washington palm — a palm tree, Washingtonia filifera, of California and Florida, having large fan-shaped leaves and small black fruits
  • whaling station — a place where the carcases of whales were processed
  • what's cooking? — what's happening?
  • witch of agnesi — a plane curve symmetrical about the y- axis and asymptotic to the x- axis, given by the equation x 2 y =4 a 2 (2 a − y).
  • wrongheadedness — The state of being wrongheaded.
  • yin-yang school — a school of ancient Chinese philosophers who interpreted history in terms of the influence of the seasons and of five elements: earth, wood, metal, fire, and water.
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