0%

12-letter words containing d, t, h

  • fainthearted — lacking courage; cowardly; timorous.
  • falsehearted — Alternative spelling of false-hearted.
  • farsightedly — In a farsighted manner.
  • farthingdale — (British, dated, 13th-19th C.) A unit of area equal to one quarter of an acre.
  • farthingland — a unit of land area, sometimes described as being equivalent to thirty acres
  • father's day — a day, usually the third Sunday in June, set aside in honor of fathers.
  • featherheads — Plural form of featherhead.
  • fed to death — bored or annoyed
  • feel cheated — If you feel cheated, you feel that you have been let down or treated unfairly.
  • feldspathoid — Also, feldspathoidal. of or relating to a group of minerals similar in chemical composition to certain feldspars except for a lower silica content.
  • feldspathose — (mineralogy) Containing feldspar.
  • fianchettoed — Simple past tense and past participle of fianchetto.
  • field theory — a detailed mathematical description of the distribution and movement of matter under the influence of one or more fields.
  • fifth-grader — a student in the fifth grade of the American education system
  • fire hydrant — a hydrant for use in extinguishing fires.
  • fitted sheet — a sheet with ends that are elasticated and shaped to fit tightly over a mattress
  • fixed-length — referring to a field, record, computer word, or other entity whose length does not vary.
  • flat-chested — If you describe a woman as flat-chested, you mean that she has small breasts.
  • floodlighted — Simple past tense and past participle of floodlight.
  • foolhardiest — Superlative form of foolhardy.
  • foregathered — Simple past tense and past participle of foregather.
  • foster child — a child raised by someone who is not its natural or adoptive parent.
  • foul-mouthed — using obscene, profane, or scurrilous language; given to filthy or abusive speech.
  • fountainhead — a fountain or spring from which a stream flows; the head or source of a stream.
  • fourth grade — school year: age 9-10
  • fourth world — the world's most poverty-stricken nations, especially in Africa and Asia, marked by very low GNP per capita and great dependence upon foreign economic aid.
  • fowl typhoid — a septicemic disease of fowl, especially chickens, caused by the bacterium Salmonella gallinarum and marked by fever, loss of appetite, thirst, anemic pallor of the skin of the head, and prostration.
  • free-hearted — light-hearted; spontaneous; frank; generous.
  • freight yard — a place on a rail network where freight trains are made up or broken up
  • frightenedly — thrown into a fright; afraid; scared; terrified: a frightened child cowering in the corner.
  • full-mouthed — (of cattle, sheep, etc.) having a complete set of teeth.
  • get ahead of — to outdo or excel
  • get ahold of — to get in touch with
  • get the bird — to be fired or dismissed
  • get the idea — understand
  • glutethimide — a white, crystalline, water-insoluble powder, C 13 H 15 NO 2 , used as a hypnotic and sedative.
  • go down with — If you go down with an illness or a disease, you catch it.
  • go hard with — to cause pain or difficulty to (someone)
  • go the round — to be circulated among a number of people: said of a story, rumor, etc.
  • god-botherer — an over-zealous Christian
  • goddaughters — Plural form of goddaughter.
  • gold therapy — administration of gold salts as a treatment for disease, especially rheumatoid arthritis.
  • goldsmithery — the occupation of a goldsmith
  • goldsmithing — The work of a goldsmith; the forging of gold.
  • good-hearted — kind or generous; considerate; benevolent.
  • graduateship — the time or condition of being a graduate
  • graft hybrid — a hybrid plant that is produced by grafting and that exhibits characters of both the stock and the scion.
  • grandaughter — Alternative spelling of granddaughter.
  • grandfathers — Plural form of grandfather.
  • grandmothers — Plural form of grandmother.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?