0%

12-letter words containing c, a, h, i, e, r

  • handicappers — Plural form of handicapper.
  • handicrafter — One who engages in handicrafts.
  • handkerchief — a small piece of linen, silk, or other fabric, usually square, and used especially for wiping one's nose, eyes, face, etc., or for decorative purposes.
  • hard science — any of the natural or physical sciences, as chemistry, biology, physics, or astronomy, in which aspects of the universe are investigated by means of hypotheses and experiments.
  • haricot bean — Haricot beans are small white beans that are eaten as a vegetable. They are often sold dried rather than fresh.
  • haricot vert — green bean.
  • harvest tick — chigger (def 1).
  • headkerchief — A kerchief worn on the head.
  • heart urchin — an echinoderm of the order Spatangoida, having an elongate, somewhat heart-shaped outer covering.
  • hebephreniac — a person suffering from hebephrenia
  • hedge garlic — an erect, cruciferous herb, Sisymbrium officinale, having a garlicky odor.
  • helical gear — a cylindrical gear wheel whose teeth follow the pitch surface in a helical manner.
  • helical rack — a rack having teeth set at an oblique angle to the edges. Compare rack1 (def 5).
  • helicobacter — Any member of the Helicobacter bacteria.
  • helicographs — Plural form of helicograph.
  • heliographic — a device for signaling by means of a movable mirror that reflects beams of light, especially sunlight, to a distance.
  • hemerocallis — the genus comprising the day lilies.
  • hemichordate — belonging or pertaining to the chordates of the phylum Hemichordata, comprising small, widely distributed, marine animals, as the acorn worms.
  • heraldically — of, relating to, or characteristic of heralds or heraldry: heraldic form; heraldic images; heraldic history; a heraldic device.
  • herbicidally — from a herbicidal point of view
  • hermetically — so as to be airtight: hermetically sealed.
  • heroic drama — Restoration tragedy, especially that popular in England c1660–1700, using highly rhetorical language and written in heroic couplets.
  • heroicomical — blending heroic and comic elements: a heroicomic poem.
  • heterosocial — relating to or denoting mixed-sex social relationships
  • heterotactic — of, relating to, or characterized by heterotaxis.
  • hexachloride — a chloride containing six atoms of chlorine.
  • hibernaculum — a protective case or covering, especially for winter, as of an animal or a plant bud.
  • hierarchical — of, belonging to, or characteristic of a hierarchy.
  • hierarchists — hierarchical principles, rule, or influence.
  • hierarchized — Simple past tense and past participle of hierarchize.
  • hieratically — In a hieratic way.
  • hierocracies — Plural form of hierocracy.
  • hierographic — of or relating to hierographs
  • hierophantic — (in ancient Greece) an official expounder of rites of worship and sacrifice.
  • hippocentaur — Centaur.
  • hippocrepian — (of an aquatic organism or plant) shaped like a horseshoe
  • hire charges — the amount of money it costs to hire something, such as a bike, car, etc
  • hire company — a company that hires things out to people
  • hitch a ride — hitchhike
  • horometrical — Relating to horometry.
  • horse racing — a contest of speed among horses that either are ridden by jockeys or pull sulkies and their drivers.
  • hovering act — an act forbidding or restricting the loitering of foreign or domestic vessels within the prescribed limits of a coastal nation.
  • hydraulicked — (of an extracted mineral) excavated using water
  • hydroelastic — undergoing a change in elasticity as a result of the flow of water or another fluid
  • hyper-social — relating to, devoted to, or characterized by friendly companionship or relations: a social club.
  • hyperacidity — excessive acidity, as of the gastric juice.
  • hyperalgesic — Of or pertaining to hyperalgesia.
  • hyperbolical — having the nature of hyperbole; exaggerated.
  • hyperchaotic — Of or pertaining to hyperchaos.
  • hyperdynamic — (physiology) Describing an increase in both blood pressure and pulse pressure.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?