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13-letter words containing c, o, e, h

  • hypolipidemic — That reduces the concentration of lipid in blood serum.
  • hypometabolic — Relating to hypometabolism.
  • hyposecretion — a diminished secretion.
  • hypothecating — Present participle of hypothecate.
  • hypothecation — to pledge to a creditor as security without delivering over; mortgage.
  • hypotheticals — Plural form of hypothetical.
  • hypsometrical — Of or pertaining to hypsometry.
  • hyracotherium — eohippus.
  • iatrochemical — relating to iatrochemistry or iatrochemists
  • iceman cometh — a play (1946) by Eugene O'Neill.
  • ichneumon fly — any of numerous wasplike insects of the family Ichneumonidae, the larvae of which are parasitic on caterpillars and immature stages of other insects.
  • iconographies — Plural form of iconography.
  • ideographical — Alternative form of ideographic.
  • ides of march — 15th March: ominous date
  • immunochemist — A chemist whose speciality is immunochemistry.
  • in the act of — while committing: crime, transgression
  • in the clouds — a visible collection of particles of water or ice suspended in the air, usually at an elevation above the earth's surface.
  • in the pocket — (of a fly half) in an attacking position slightly further back from play than normal, making himself available for a drop goal attempt
  • incoherencies — incoherence.
  • inductothermy — the production of fever by means of electromagnetic induction.
  • inspectorship — The condition of being an inspector; the office of an inspector.
  • interchondral — of or relating to cartilage or a cartilage.
  • iontophoretic — Of or pertaining to iontophoresis.
  • isochromosome — an abnormal chromosome in which the two arms share identical genetic information
  • jockey shorts — Jockey shorts are a type of men's underpants.
  • john endicottJohn, Endecott, John.
  • john fletcherJohn, 1579–1625, English dramatist: collaborated with Francis Beaumont 1606?–16; with Philip Massinger 1613–25.
  • john wycliffeJohn, c1320–84, English theologian, religious reformer, and Biblical translator.
  • joseph craterJoseph Force [fawrs,, fohrs] /fɔrs,, foʊrs/ (Show IPA), 1889–? a judge of the New York State Supreme Court: his mysterious disappearance on August 6, 1930, has never been solved.
  • joseph's coat — an ornamental species of pigweed (Amaranthus tricolor) having red, yellow, and green upper leaves
  • joseph's-coat — a cultivated form of Amaranthus tricolor, having headlike clusters of small flowers and blotched and colored leaves.
  • keep in touch — stay in contact
  • kosher pickle — a garlic-flavored pickle, sold especially in Jewish delicatessens.
  • lace-up shoes — shoes which are fastened with laces
  • lead chromate — a yellow crystalline compound, PbCrO 4 , toxic, insoluble in water: used as an industrial paint pigment.
  • lecherousness — The property of being lecherous.
  • lechosos opal — a variety of opal having a deep-green play of color.
  • leptocephalic — having a narrow skull
  • leptocephalus — a colorless, transparent, flattened larva, especially of certain eels and ocean fishes.
  • lethal factor — a gene that under certain conditions causes the death of an organism.
  • leucitohedron — a trapezohedron
  • lexicographer — a writer, editor, or compiler of a dictionary.
  • lexicographic — Like a dictionary, relating to lexicography (the writing of a dictionary).
  • lichenization — any complex organism of the group Lichenes, composed of a fungus in symbiotic union with an alga and having a greenish, gray, yellow, brown, or blackish thallus that grows in leaflike, crustlike, or branching forms on rocks, trees, etc.
  • light colonel — a lieutenant colonel.
  • literacy hour — (in England and Wales) a daily reading and writing lesson that was introduced into the national primary school curriculum in 1998 to raise standards of literacy
  • load the dice — anything put in or on something for conveyance or transportation; freight; cargo: The truck carried a load of watermelons.
  • lockwood home — a house built of timber planks that lock together without the use of nails
  • lower chamber — lower house.
  • lower chinook — an extinct Chinookan language that was spoken by tribes on both banks of the Columbia River estuary.
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