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11-letter words containing c, a, p, i, h

  • germaphobic — Alternative form of germophobic.
  • graphically — giving a clear and effective picture; vivid: a graphic account of an earthquake.
  • graphicness — The quality of being graphic: grotesqueness or vividness.
  • haemophilic — Of or pertaining to haemophilia.
  • hagioscopes — Plural form of hagioscope.
  • halomorphic — containing or resulting from the presence of neutral salts or alkaline salts or the presence of both
  • hand-picked — to pick by hand.
  • handicapped — Sometimes Offensive. physically or mentally disabled.
  • handicapper — Horse Racing. a racetrack official or employee who assigns the weight a horse must carry in a race. a person employed, as by a newspaper, to make predictions on the outcomes of horse races.
  • handpicking — to pick by hand.
  • haptotropic — relating to haptotropism
  • hardscaping — Hardscape.
  • harpsichord — a keyboard instrument, precursor of the piano, in which the strings are plucked by leather or quill points connected with the keys, in common use from the 16th to the 18th century, and revived in the 20th.
  • haruspicate — of or relating to a haruspex
  • haute-piece — a standing flange fixed to or formed on a pauldron as a protection for one side of the neck.
  • helicograph — an instrument for drawing helices.
  • hemeralopic — (medicine) Unable to see clearly in bright light; day-blind; suffering from hemeralopia.
  • hemianoptic — suffering from hemiopia, blind in half the field of vision
  • hemophiliac — Also, hemophile. a person having hemophilia.
  • hepatitis c — a form of hepatitis with clinical effects similar to those of hepatitis B, caused by a blood-borne retrovirus (hepatitis C virus) that may be of the hepatitis non-A, non-B type.
  • hepatotoxic — Damaging or destructive to liver cells.
  • heptarchies — Plural form of heptarchy.
  • heptarchist — A ruler of one division of a heptarchy.
  • heptastichs — Plural form of heptastich.
  • high places — (in ancient Semitic religions) a place of worship, usually a temple or altar on a hilltop.
  • high-impact — High-impact exercise puts a lot of stress on your body.
  • hippiatrics — the study of the diseases of horses
  • hippocampal — of or relating to the hippocampus.
  • hippocampus — Classical Mythology. a sea horse with two forefeet, and a body ending in the tail of a dolphin or fish.
  • hippocrates — ("Father of Medicine") c460–c377 b.c, Greek physician.
  • hippocratic — ("Father of Medicine") c460–c377 b.c, Greek physician.
  • hispanicism — an idiom peculiar to Spanish.
  • hispanicist — Hispanist.
  • hispanicize — to make Spanish or Latin American, as in character, custom, or style.
  • holographic — Also, holographic [hol-uh-graf-ik, hoh-luh-] /ˌhɒl əˈgræf ɪk, ˌhoʊ lə-/ (Show IPA), holographical. wholly written by the person in whose name it appears: a holograph letter.
  • homeopathic — of, relating to, or according to the principles of homeopathy.
  • homographic — a word of the same written form as another but of different meaning and usually origin, whether pronounced the same way or not, as bear 1 “to carry; support” and bear 2 “animal” or lead 1 “to conduct” and lead 2 “metal.”.
  • homoplastic — correspondence in form or structure, owing to a similar environment.
  • homotypical — (biology) homotypal.
  • hydnocarpic — of or relating to hydnocarpic acid
  • hydropathic — Relating to hydropathy.
  • hypallactic — relating to a hypallage
  • hyperactive — unusually or abnormally active: a company's hyperactive growth; the child's hyperactive imagination.
  • hyperacuity — an extreme acuteness (of the senses)
  • hyperacusis — (medicine) A heightened sensitivity to some sounds.
  • hypercapnia — Excessive carbon dioxide in the bloodstream, typically caused by inadequate respiration.
  • hypercarbia — (medicine) the condition of having an abnormally high concentration of carbon dioxide in the blood.
  • hypercholia — abnormally large secretion of bile.
  • hyperphagic — bulimia.
  • hyperplasic — Relating to hyperplasia.
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