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11-letter words containing c, a, h, e, u

  • coach house — a building in which a coach is kept
  • cochlearium — In Ancient Rome, a small spoon with a long tapering handle.
  • crack house — a house or flat where drugs are dealt and used
  • crazy house — an asylum for people with psychiatric disorders
  • creophagous — flesh-eating or carnivorous
  • cuitlacoche — corn smut.
  • dauerschlaf — a form of therapy, now rarely used, that involves the use of drugs to induce long periods of deep sleep.
  • debauchedly — In a debauched manner.
  • debauchment — The act of debauching or corrupting; the act of seducing from virtue or duty.
  • deutschland — Germany
  • deutschmark — the former standard monetary unit of Germany, divided into 100 pfennigs; replaced by the euro in 2002: until 1990 the standard monetary unit of West Germany
  • dicephalous — having two heads
  • donut peach — fruit
  • douchecanoe — (vulgar, slang, pejorative) A rude, obnoxious, or contemptible person.
  • dutch metal — an alloy of copper and zinc in the form of thin sheets, used as an imitation of gold leaf.
  • dutch treat — a meal or entertainment for which each person pays his or her own expenses.
  • escarmouche — a skirmish
  • eucharistic — (Theosophy) Pertaining to the Eucharist.
  • euchromatin — the part of a chromosome that constitutes the major genes and does not stain strongly with basic dyes when the cell is not dividing
  • feather cut — a woman's hair style in which the hair is cut in short and uneven lengths and formed into small curls with featherlike tips.
  • feather-cut — a woman's hair style in which the hair is cut in short and uneven lengths and formed into small curls with featherlike tips.
  • furtherance — the act of furthering; promotion; advancement.
  • glaucophane — a sodium-rich monoclinic mineral of the amphibole family, usually metamorphic.
  • hair-curler — a cylindrical device, usually electronic and heated, used to curl the hair
  • hallucinate — to have hallucinations.
  • hardecanute — 1019?–42, king of Denmark 1035–42, king of England 1040–42 (son of Canute).
  • hardicanute — 1019?–42, king of Denmark 1035–42, king of England 1040–42 (son of Canute).
  • haruspicate — of or relating to a haruspex
  • hash bucket — hash coding
  • haunch bone — the ilium or hipbone.
  • haunch-bone — the ilium or hipbone.
  • haute ecole — a series of intricate steps, gaits, etc., taught to an exhibition horse.
  • haute-piece — a standing flange fixed to or formed on a pauldron as a protection for one side of the neck.
  • health club — a usually private club that offers its members facilities for exercising and physical conditioning.
  • heartstruck — Driven to the heart; infixed in the mind.
  • heat source — sth that generates warmth
  • heavy crude — a type of crude oil that does not flow easily and has greater viscosity and specific density than other types of crude
  • hederaceous — (rare) Of, pertaining to, or resembling ivy.
  • hercogamous — (of flowers) incapable of self-fertilization
  • herculaneum — an ancient city in SW Italy, on the Bay of Naples: buried along with Pompeii by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in a.d. 79; partially excavated.
  • heuristical — Of or pertaining to heuristics.
  • hibernacula — Plural form of hibernaculum.
  • hierurgical — of or relating to sacred rites
  • homonuclear — a homonuclear molecule is composed of atoms of the same element or isotope and all of its nuclei are alike
  • horn clause — (logic)   A set of atomic literals with at most one positive literal. Usually written L <- L1, ..., Ln or <- L1, ..., Ln where n>=0, "<-" means "is implied by" and comma stands for conjuction ("AND"). If L is false the clause is regarded as a goal. Horn clauses can express a subset of statements of first order logic. The name "Horn Clause" comes from the logician Alfred Horn, who first pointed out the significance of such clauses in 1951, in the article "On sentences which are true of direct unions of algebras", Journal of Symbolic Logic, 16, 14-21. A definite clause is a Horn clause that has exactly one positive literal.
  • house place — (in medieval architecture) a room common to all the inhabitants of a house, as a hall.
  • house-clean — to clean the inside of a person's house
  • house-craft — skill in domestic management
  • hucksterage — the business of a huckster; peddling
  • hue and cry — Early English Law. the pursuit of a felon or an offender with loud outcries or clamor to give an alarm.
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