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11-letter words containing a, p, e, r, i

  • graphicness — The quality of being graphic: grotesqueness or vividness.
  • graphitized — (chemistry, of carbon) Converted to graphite.
  • graptolites — Plural form of graptolite.
  • grass snipe — the pectoral sandpiper.
  • gravisphere — the area in which the gravitational force of a celestial body is predominant.
  • greasepaint — an oily mixture of melted tallow or grease and a pigment, used by actors, clowns, etc., for making up their faces.
  • grillparzerFranz [frahnts] /frɑnts/ (Show IPA), 1791–1872, Austrian poet and dramatist.
  • grim reaper — the personification of death as a man or cloaked skeleton holding a scythe.
  • gripe water — a solution given to infants to relieve colic
  • haloperidol — a major antipsychotic agent, C 21 H 23 ClFNO 2 , used in the management of schizophrenia, severe anxiety, and other behavioral disorders.
  • handicapper — Horse Racing. a racetrack official or employee who assigns the weight a horse must carry in a race. a person employed, as by a newspaper, to make predictions on the outcomes of horse races.
  • haruspicate — of or relating to a haruspex
  • headstripes — Plural form of headstripe.
  • hebephrenia — a type of schizophrenia characterized by emotionless, incongruous, or silly behavior, intellectual deterioration, and hallucinations, frequently beginning insidiously during adolescence.
  • helicograph — an instrument for drawing helices.
  • heliographs — Plural form of heliograph.
  • heliography — The scientific study of the sun.
  • hemeralopia — a condition of the eyes in which sight is normal in the night or in a dim light but is abnormally poor or wholly absent in the day or in a bright light.
  • hemeralopic — (medicine) Unable to see clearly in bright light; day-blind; suffering from hemeralopia.
  • hemiparesis — partial paralysis affecting only one side of the body.
  • hemipterans — Plural form of hemipteran.
  • heparinized — Simple past tense and past participle of heparinize.
  • heptarchies — Plural form of heptarchy.
  • heptarchist — A ruler of one division of a heptarchy.
  • heterotopia — misplacement or displacement, as of an organ.
  • hexapartite — sexpartite.
  • hierography — a treatise on religion or sacred things
  • hierophants — Plural form of hierophant.
  • hierophobia — an irrational fear of sacred objects or people
  • hippeastrum — any plant of the South American amaryllidaceous genus Hippeastrum: cultivated for their large funnel-shaped typically red flowers
  • hippocrates — ("Father of Medicine") c460–c377 b.c, Greek physician.
  • holiday rep — A holiday rep is someone employed by a holiday company to help look after people when they are on holiday.
  • horripilate — to produce horripilation on.
  • hospitaller — a member of the religious and military order (Knights Hospitalers or Knights of St. John of Jerusalem) originating about the time of the first Crusade (1096–99) and taking its name from a hospital at Jerusalem.
  • hyperactive — unusually or abnormally active: a company's hyperactive growth; the child's hyperactive imagination.
  • hyperacuity — an extreme acuteness (of the senses)
  • hyperacusis — (medicine) A heightened sensitivity to some sounds.
  • hypercapnia — Excessive carbon dioxide in the bloodstream, typically caused by inadequate respiration.
  • hypercarbia — (medicine) the condition of having an abnormally high concentration of carbon dioxide in the blood.
  • hypercholia — abnormally large secretion of bile.
  • hyperdorian — of or related to the mode above the Dorian mode in ancient Greek music
  • hyperlydian — relating to the highest scale or mode in ancient Greek music
  • hypermnesia — the condition of having an unusually vivid or precise memory.
  • hyperorexia — compulsive overeating
  • hyperovaria — precocious sexuality in girls due to abnormally heavy ovarian secretion.
  • hyperoxemia — abnormal acidity of the blood.
  • hyperphagia — bulimia.
  • hyperphagic — bulimia.
  • hyperplasia — abnormal multiplication of cells.
  • hyperplasic — Relating to hyperplasia.
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