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11-letter words containing d, c, h

  • frenchified — Simple past tense and past participle of frenchify.
  • fresh-faced — having a healthy or ruddy appearance
  • frog orchid — any of several orchids having greenish flowers thought to resemble small frogs, esp Coeloglossum viride of calcareous turf
  • frogmarched — Simple past tense and past participle of frogmarch.
  • gatecrashed — Simple past tense and past participle of gatecrash.
  • get hitched — get married
  • ghetto code — (humour, programming)   A particularly inelegant and obviously suboptimal section of code that still meets the original requirements.
  • ghost dance — a ritual dance intended to establish communion with the dead, especially such a dance as performed by various messianic western American Indian cults in the late 19th century.
  • glochidiate — (botany) Having barbs.
  • godchildren — Plural form of godchild.
  • goldfinches — Plural form of goldfinch.
  • goldschmidt — Richard Benedikt. 1878–1958, US geneticist, born in Germany. He advanced the theory that heredity is determined by the chemical configuration of the chromosome molecule rather than by the qualities of the individual genes
  • grand chain — a figure in formation dances, such as the lancers and Scottish reels, in which couples split up and move around in a circle in opposite directions, passing all other dancers until reaching their original partners
  • grand duchy — a territory ruled by a grand duke or grand duchess.
  • grand march — the opening ceremonies of a formal ball, in which guests promenade into or around the ballroom.
  • ground itch — a disease of the skin of the feet, caused by penetration of hookworm larvae, characterized by a blisterlike eruption and itching.
  • groundcloth — A groundcloth is a piece of waterproof material which you put on the ground to sleep on when you are camping.
  • hack around — to cut, notch, slice, chop, or sever (something) with or as with heavy, irregular blows (often followed by up or down): to hack meat; to hack down trees.
  • hadley cell — an atmospheric convection pattern in which a current of hot equatorial air rises, divides, cools as it moves toward the poles, descends, and warms as it returns to the equator
  • hairy-faced — having a face covered with hair.
  • half cocked — to set the hammer of (a firearm) at half cock.
  • half-closed — having or forming a boundary or barrier: He was blocked by a closed door. The house had a closed porch.
  • half-cocked — (of a firearm) at the position of half cock.
  • half-cooked — not cooked thoroughly
  • half-decade — a period of ten years: the three decades from 1776 to 1806.
  • half-second — 1/120 of a minute of time
  • hamiticized — exhibiting the characteristics of or influenced by speakers of Hamitic.
  • hand scroll — a roll of parchment, paper, copper, or other material, especially one with writing on it: a scroll containing the entire Old Testament.
  • hand-picked — to pick by hand.
  • hand-stitch — to stitch or sew by hand.
  • handcrafted — handicraft.
  • handcrafter — One who handcrafts or engages in handcraft or handicraft.
  • handcuffing — Present participle of handcuff.
  • 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.
  • handicrafts — Plural form of handicraft.
  • handpicking — to pick by hand.
  • handscrolls — Plural form of handscroll.
  • hard cheese — an unpleasant, difficult, or adverse situation: It's hard cheese for the unskilled worker these days.
  • hard launch — the general or official launch, esp of a website, after which all features, products, and services are understood to be available
  • hard sector — (storage)   An archaic floppy disk format employing multiple synchronisation holes in the media to define the sectors.
  • hard-coated — having a coarsely textured coat, as a dog.
  • hard-ticket — a ticket entitling one to a reserved seat.
  • 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).
  • hardscaping — Hardscape.
  • harmolodics — the technique of each musician in a group simultaneously improvising around the melodic and rhythmic patterns in a tune, rather than one musician improvising on its underlying harmonic pattern while the others play an accompaniment
  • 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.
  • hash coding — (programming, algorithm)   (Or "hashing") A scheme for providing rapid access to data items which are distinguished by some key. Each data item to be stored is associated with a key, e.g. the name of a person. A hash function is applied to the item's key and the resulting hash value is used as an index to select one of a number of "hash buckets" in a hash table. The table contains pointers to the original items. If, when adding a new item, the hash table already has an entry at the indicated location then that entry's key must be compared with the given key to see if it is the same. If two items' keys hash to the same value (a "hash collision") then some alternative location is used (e.g. the next free location cyclically following the indicated one). For best performance, the table size and hash function must be tailored to the number of entries and range of keys to be used. The hash function usually depends on the table size so if the table needs to be enlarged it must usually be completely rebuilt. When you look up a name in the phone book (for example), you typically hash it by extracting its first letter; the hash buckets are the alphabetically ordered letter sections. See also: btree, checksum, CRC, pseudorandom number, random, random number, soundex.
  • head collar — the part of a bridle that fits round a horse's head
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