12-letter words containing a, u, t, h, e, n
- saint-hubert — town in S Quebec, Canada: part of metropolitan Montreal: pop. 77,000
- sharp tongue — If you say that someone has a sharp tongue, you are critical of the fact that they say things which are unkind though often clever.
- shawl tongue — kiltie (def 3).
- slaughterman — a person employed to kill animals in a slaughterhouse
- south korean — a country in E Asia: formed 1948 after the division of the former country of Korea at 38° N. 36,600 sq. mi. (94,795 sq. km). Capital: Seoul. Compare Korea.
- south orange — a city in NE New Jersey.
- southeastern — from the south east
- stenophagous — (of an animal) feeding on a limited variety of foods (opposed to euryphagous).
- sudden death — an overtime period in which a tied contest is won and play is stopped immediately after one of the contestants scores, as in football, or goes ahead, as in golf.
- superheating — Superheating of steam is raising its temperature to well above boiling point.
- synantherous — with united anthers
- telanthropus — a genus of fossil hominids, known from two fragmentary lower jaws found in the region of Swartkrans, near Johannesburg, South Africa.
- telharmonium — a musical keyboard instrument operating by alternating currents of electricity which, on impulse from the keyboard, produce music at a distant point via telephone lines.
- thankfulness — feeling or expressing gratitude; appreciative.
- thaumatogeny — the belief that the origin of life was the result of a miracle
- the mountain — an extremist faction during the French Revolution led by Danton and Robespierre
- the silurian — the Silurian period or rock system
- thermal unit — a unit of heat energy or of the equivalent of heat energy in work.
- thread count — thread density of a woven fabric
- thunderflash — a pyrotechnic device which is noisy, but not dangerous, and which is used in military exercises
- transhumance — the seasonal migration of livestock, and the people who tend them, between lowlands and adjacent mountains.
- unaffrighted — to frighten.
- unalphabetic — in the order of the letters of the alphabet: alphabetical arrangement.
- unauthorized — lacking permission; unsanctioned: unauthorized access.
- unbreathable — not able to be breathed
- uncharitable — deficient in charity; unkind; harsh; unforgiving; censorious; merciless: an uncharitable attitude; an uncharitable neighbor.
- unchasteness — lack of chastity
- under threat — If a person or thing is under threat, there is a danger that something unpleasant might be done to them, or that they might cease to exist.
- undispatched — not dispatched; not delivered or sent out
- unenthralled — not enthralled or charmed; uncaptivated
- unethicality — lacking moral principles; unwilling to adhere to proper rules of conduct.
- unexhaustive — exhausting a subject, topic, etc.; comprehensive; thorough: He published an exhaustive study of Greek vases.
- unfathomable — not able to be fathomed, or completely understood; incomprehensible: heroism in the face of unfathomable conflict.
- unhabituated — to accustom (a person, the mind, etc.), as to a particular situation: Wealth habituated him to luxury.
- unhesitantly — hesitating; undecided, doubtful, or disinclined.
- unhesitating — without hesitation; not delayed by uncertainty: an unhesitating decision.
- unhospitable — not hospitable
- unhyphenated — without a hyphen
- unhysterical — not showing or suggesting any hysteria; controlled; sensible; calm;
- unmethodical — characterized by lack of method or disorderliness
- unmethylated — Also called methoxide. any derivative of methyl alcohol, as sodium methylate, CH 3 ONa.
- unrhetorical — not rhetorical; literal; plainspoken
- unstanchable — unstoppable
- unthreatened — not threatened; free from threats or danger
- watchfulness — vigilant or alert; closely observant: The sentry remained watchful throughout the night.
- weatherbound — (often nautical) Delayed or prevented by bad weather from doing something, such as travelling.
- white walnut — butternut (def 1).
- whitmanesque — of or like Walt Whitman, his style, or his outlook; often, specif., democratic, expansive, exuberant, etc.
- wrathfulness — The quality of being wrathful; wrath.