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

  • ftp archive — archive site
  • geophysical — the branch of geology that deals with the physics of the earth and its atmosphere, including oceanography, seismology, volcanology, and geomagnetism.
  • geostrophic — of or relating to the balance between the Coriolis force and the horizontal pressure force in the atmosphere.
  • germaphobic — Alternative form of germophobic.
  • germophobic — Morbidly afraid of germs.
  • graphicness — The quality of being graphic: grotesqueness or vividness.
  • haemophilic — Of or pertaining to haemophilia.
  • hagioscopes — Plural form of hagioscope.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • hebephrenic — Pertaining to, or characteristic of, hebephrenia.
  • helicograph — an instrument for drawing helices.
  • helicopters — Plural form of helicopter.
  • helicospore — a coiled cylindrical fungal spore.
  • heliophobic — fearing or unable to withstand sunlight
  • helioscopic — of or relating to observations of the sun
  • heliotropic — turning or growing toward the light.
  • helispheric — spiral
  • 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
  • hemimorphic — (of a crystal) having the two ends of an axis unlike in their planes or modifications; lacking a center of symmetry.
  • hemispheric — of or relating to a hemisphere.
  • hemophiliac — Also, hemophile. a person having hemophilia.
  • hemopoietic — hematopoiesis.
  • hemotrophic — the material from the maternal bloodstream and placenta that nourishes a mammalian embryo.
  • 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.
  • heroic poem — a poem written in an epic style using lines of iambic pentameter.
  • heteroptics — incorrect or perverted perception of what is seen; hallucinatory vision.
  • heterotypic — of or relating to the first or reductional division in meiosis.
  • hierophobic — a person who suffers from hierophobia
  • high places — (in ancient Semitic religions) a place of worship, usually a temple or altar on a hilltop.
  • high-priced — expensive; costly: a high-priced camera.
  • hippocrates — ("Father of Medicine") c460–c377 b.c, Greek physician.
  • hispanicize — to make Spanish or Latin American, as in character, custom, or style.
  • homeopathic — of, relating to, or according to the principles of homeopathy.
  • http cookie — (web)   A small string of information sent by a web server to a web browser that will be sent back by the browser each time it accesses that server. Cookies were invented by Netscape to make it easier to maintain state between HTTP transactions. They can contain any arbitrary information the server chooses to put in them. The most common use of cookies is to identify and authenticate a user who has logged in to a website, so they don't have to sign in every time they visit. Other example uses are maintaining a shopping basket of goods you have selected to purchase during a session at an online shop or site personalisation (presenting different pages to different users). The browser limits the size of each cookie and the number each server can store. This prevents a malicious site consuming lots of disk space on the user's computer. The only information that cookies can return to the server is what that server previously sent out. The main privacy concern is that it is not obvious when a site is using cookies or what for. Even if you don't log in or supply any personal information to a site, it can still assign you a unique identifier and store it in a "tracking cookie". This can then be used to track every page you ever visit on the site. However, since it is possible to do the same thing without cookies, the UK law requiring sites to declare their use of cookies makes little sense and has been widely ignored. After using a shared computer, e.g. in an Internet cafe, you should remove all cookies to prevent the browser identifying the next user as you if they happen to visit the same sites.
  • humperdinck — Engelbert [eng-uh l-bert;; English eng-guh l-burt] /ˈɛŋ əlˌbɛrt;; English ˈɛŋ gəlˌbɜrt/ (Show IPA), 1854–1921, German composer.
  • 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.
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