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10-letter words containing a, o, n, e, h

  • hierophany — A physical manifestation of the holy or sacred, serving as a spiritual eidolon for emulation or worship.
  • hippomanes — (formerly) a substance found on the forehead of a newborn foal or obtained from a mare in foal, thought to act as an aphrodisiac
  • hoarseness — having a vocal tone characterized by weakness of intensity and excessive breathiness; husky: the hoarse voice of the auctioneer.
  • hobohemian — Of, or pertaining to, a hobohemia.
  • hog heaven — heaven (def 6).
  • hog peanut — a twining plant, Amphicarpaea bracteata, of the legume family, bearing pods that ripen in or on the ground.
  • home brand — an item packaged and marketed under the brand name of a particular retailer, usually a large supermarket chain, rather than that of the manufacturer
  • home range — the area in which an animal normally lives.
  • home stand — a series of consecutive sports events, as baseball games, played in a team's own stadium.
  • home-alone — (esp of a young child) left in a house, flat, etc unattended
  • homemaking — the establishment or management of a home; duties of a homemaker.
  • homogenate — a mixture that has been homogenized.
  • homopteran — homopterous.
  • honey bear — a kinkajou.
  • honeyeater — An Australasian songbird with a long brushlike tongue for feeding on nectar.
  • honoraries — Plural form of honorary.
  • honourable — (British spelling) Alternative form of honorable.
  • hoop snake — any of several harmless snakes, as the mud snake and rainbow snake, fabled to take its tail in its mouth and roll along like a hoop.
  • hootenanny — a social gathering or informal concert featuring folk singing and, sometimes, dancing.
  • hop garden — a field of hops
  • horse bean — fava bean.
  • horsedrawn — Alternative spelling of horse-drawn.
  • horsewoman — a woman who rides on horseback.
  • hortensial — (obsolete) Fit for a garden.
  • hour angle — the angle, measured westward through 360°, between the celestial meridian of an observer and the hour circle of a celestial body.
  • houseclean — to subject (a house, room, etc.) to housecleaning.
  • houseplant — an ornamental plant that is grown indoors or adapts well to indoor culture.
  • housetrain — To teach a house pet to urinate and defecate outside or in a designated location in the home.
  • hovertrain — an experimental high-speed train that rides on a cushion of air over a concrete guide track in the shape of an inverted T and is propelled by one or more propellers or jet engines.
  • hyalophane — a variety of orthoclase in which some of the potassium is replaced by barium.
  • hycanthone — A particular schistosomicide, a metabolite of lucanthone.
  • hydrophane — a partly translucent variety of opal, which becomes more translucent or transparent when immersed in water.
  • hydroplane — a seaplane.
  • hygiaphone — a glass screen through which an employee may speak to members of the public, eg at a ticket office
  • hypaethron — a part of a building or court which is open to the sky
  • hyperbaton — the use, especially for emphasis, of a word order other than the expected or usual one, as in “Bird thou never wert.”.
  • hypernovae — Plural form of hypernova.
  • hyperpnoea — abnormally deep or rapid respiration.
  • hypertonia — increased rigidity, tension, and spasticity of the muscles.
  • hyphenator — One who, or that which, hyphenates.
  • hypnopedia — sleep learning.
  • hypoadenia — a deficiency of glandular activity.
  • hypomnesia — Deficiency of the memory.
  • hypothenar — the fleshly prominence on the palm at the base of the little finger.
  • ice anchor — a large, hooklike device for setting in ice to anchor a vessel or to provide a hold for a hawser in warping it along.
  • inchoately — not yet completed or fully developed; rudimentary.
  • inchoative — inceptive.
  • ironhanded — having or governing with an iron hand.
  • isohalines — a line on a map of the ocean connecting all points of equal salinity.
  • jacobethan — noting or pertaining to the architecture of England at the beginning of the 17th century.
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