0%

13-letter words containing a, t, h, e, l, d

  • the small ads — the small ads in a newspaper are short advertisements in which you can advertise something such as an object for sale or a room to let
  • thiabendazole — a drug used as an antifungal treatment and as an anthelmintic
  • thread blight — a fungal disease of woody plants, characterized by thick, threadlike strands of mycelium on the undersides of the leaves and branches.
  • three old cat — three-a-cat.
  • thundersquall — a combined squall and thunderstorm.
  • tintagel head — a cape in SW England, on the W coast of Cornwall.
  • toothed whale — any whale of the suborder Odontoceti, having conical teeth in one or both jaws and feeding on fish, squid, etc.
  • tread lightly — to proceed with delicacy or tact
  • triple-header — a set of three games, as of basketball, each game being played in the same arena on the same day and often between different pairs of teams.
  • twelfth grade — (in the US) the final year of secondary school after which students usually graduate at age 17 or 18
  • tzom gedaliah — a Jewish fast day observed on the third day of the month of Tishri in memory of the treacherous murder of Gedaliah, Jewish governor of Judah appointed by King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylonia.
  • unchlorinated — not chlorinated; not treated with chlorine
  • unestablished — not established.
  • velocity head — the velocity of a fluid expressed in terms of the head or static pressure required to produce that velocity. It equals ρν/2 where ρ is the density of the fluid and ν is the velocity. In hydrology the density of water can be written 1/G where G is the gravitational constant
  • wall of death — (at a fairground) a giant cylinder round the inside walls of which a motorcyclist rides
  • warmheartedly — Alternative form of warm-heartedly.
  • white admiral — any color having components of both red and blue, such as lavender, especially one deep in tone.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?