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9-letter words containing a, s, h, p, i

  • psychical — of or relating to the human soul or mind; mental (opposed to physical).
  • pushchair — A pushchair is a small chair on wheels, in which a baby or small child can sit and be wheeled around.
  • rajahship — the office or territory of a rajah
  • reshaping — the act of shaping again or differently
  • rhapsodic — extravagantly enthusiastic; ecstatic.
  • rhopalism — the art, skill, or incidence of writing rhopalic verse
  • rivalship — rivalry
  • sahaptian — a family of North American Indian languages consisting of Sahaptin and Nez Percé
  • saintship — the qualities or status of a saint.
  • sapphired — blue-coloured
  • scaldship — the office of a scald or an ancient Scandinavian poet or bard
  • seraphine — an old reed-based keyboard instrument; a reed organ
  • serigraph — a print made by the silkscreen process.
  • sharpbill — a passerine bird, Oxyruncus cristatus, of New World tropical forests, having greenish plumage and a pointed bill, related to the tyrant flycatchers.
  • shear pin — an easily replaceable pin inserted in a machine at a critical point and designed to shear and stop the machine if the load becomes too great
  • shipboard — Archaic. the deck or side of a ship. the situation of being on a ship.
  • shippable — being in a suitable form or condition for shipping1 .
  • shipshape — in good order; well-arranged; trim or tidy.
  • siphonage — the action of a siphon.
  • siphonate — (of molluscs) having a syphon
  • sisyphean — of or relating to Sisyphus.
  • skaldship — the office of an ancient Scandinavian poet
  • skiagraph — a radiograph.
  • soap dish — a dish designed to hold a bar of soap, especially as a bathroom or kitchen fixture attached to a sink, lavatory, or bathtub.
  • soap-dish — a dish designed to hold a bar of soap, especially as a bathroom or kitchen fixture attached to a sink, lavatory, or bathtub.
  • sociopath — a person with a psychopathic personality whose behavior is antisocial, often criminal, and who lacks a sense of moral responsibility or social conscience.
  • sophonias — Zephaniah.
  • spaceship — spacecraft.
  • spadefish — a deep-bodied marine fish of the genus Chaetodipterus, especially C. faber, of Atlantic coastal waters of North America.
  • spaghetti — a white, starchy pasta of Italian origin that is made in the form of long strings, boiled, and served with any of a variety of meat, tomato, or other sauces.
  • spanglish — Spanish spoken with a large admixture of English, especially American, words and expressions.
  • spearfish — fish: type of marlin
  • sphaerite — an aluminium phosphate
  • spherical — having the form of a sphere; globular.
  • spinebash — to rest; loaf.
  • steamship — a large commercial vessel, especially one driven by steam.
  • stepchair — a set of steps folding into a chair.
  • stephanie — a female given name.
  • sulphatic — sulphuric, of or pertaining to a sulphate
  • swampfish — a small fish, Chologaster cornuta, related to the cavefishes, inhabiting swamps and streams of the Atlantic coastal plain, having small but functional eyes and almost transparent skin.
  • sympathin — a substance released at certain sympathetic nerve endings: thought to be identical with adrenaline
  • symphonia — any of various medieval musical instruments, as the hurdy-gurdy.
  • syphiloma — a tumour or gumma caused by infection with syphilis
  • tall ship — type of large sailing ship
  • thaneship — thanage.
  • therapist — a person trained in the use of physical methods, as exercises, heat treatments, etc., in treating or rehabilitating the sick or wounded or helping patients overcome physical defects.
  • therapsid — any of various groups of mammallike reptiles of the extinct order Therapsida, inhabiting all continents from mid-Permian to late Triassic times, some of which were probably warm-blooded and directly ancestral to mammals.
  • transship — to transfer from one ship, truck, freight car, or other conveyance to another.
  • triphasic — having or existing in three phases.
  • upanishad — any of a class of speculative prose treatises composed between the 8th and 6th centuries b.c. and first written a.d. c1300: they represent a philosophical development beyond the Vedas, having as their principal message the unity of Brahman and Atman.
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