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11-letter words containing e, a, r, p, h

  • heptameters — Plural form of heptameter.
  • heptandrous — (of a flower) having seven stamens
  • heptangular — having seven angles.
  • heptarchies — Plural form of heptarchy.
  • heptarchist — A ruler of one division of a heptarchy.
  • heterocarpy — the production of more than one kind of fruit in one plant.
  • heteroplasm — (pathology) Tissue growing in a part of the body where it does not normally occur.
  • heteropolar — polar (def 4).
  • heterotopia — misplacement or displacement, as of an organ.
  • hexapartite — sexpartite.
  • hierography — a treatise on religion or sacred things
  • hierophants — Plural form of hierophant.
  • hierophobia — an irrational fear of sacred objects or people
  • hippeastrum — any plant of the South American amaryllidaceous genus Hippeastrum: cultivated for their large funnel-shaped typically red flowers
  • hippocrates — ("Father of Medicine") c460–c377 b.c, Greek physician.
  • holiday rep — A holiday rep is someone employed by a holiday company to help look after people when they are on holiday.
  • holographed — to make by the use of holography.
  • holographer — One who creates holograms.
  • holophrases — a word functioning as a phrase or sentence, as the imperative Go!
  • homopterans — Plural form of homopteran.
  • hoppergrass — grasshopper (def 1).
  • horn-spread — (of a horned creature) the distance between the outermost tips of the horns.
  • horographer — a person who reckons time
  • horripilate — to produce horripilation on.
  • horse opera — a television or radio program or motion picture about the Wild West, often presented serially and usually dealing with adventures of cowboys, gunmen, gold prospectors, etc. Compare Western (def 8).
  • horseplayer — a habitual bettor on horse races.
  • hospitaller — a member of the religious and military order (Knights Hospitalers or Knights of St. John of Jerusalem) originating about the time of the first Crusade (1096–99) and taking its name from a hospital at Jerusalem.
  • house party — the guests at such an affair or party: The house party goes sailing today.
  • houseparent — one of a married couple responsible for a group of young people, as students, living in a dormitory, hostel, etc., sometimes acting solely as an advisor, but often serving as host or hostess, chaperon, housekeeper, etc.
  • hydroplaned — Simple past tense and past participle of hydroplane.
  • hydroplaner — a person who pilots a hydroplane, especially a professional speedboat racer.
  • hydroplanes — Plural form of hydroplane.
  • hyetography — the study of the annual and geographical distribution of rainfall.
  • hymenoptera — hymenopteran.
  • hyper-aware — having knowledge; conscious; cognizant: aware of danger.
  • 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.
  • hyperboreal — Hyperborean.
  • hyperborean — Classical Mythology. one of a people supposed to live in a land of perpetual sunshine and abundance beyond the north wind.
  • 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.
  • hypercasual — Extremely casual.
  • hypercharge — a quantum number assigned to baryons and mesons, equal to B + S, where B is the baryon number and S is the strangeness.
  • hypercholia — abnormally large secretion of bile.
  • hyperdactyl — having an excessive number of fingers or toes
  • hyperdorian — of or related to the mode above the Dorian mode in ancient Greek music
  • hypergelast — Someone who laughs excessively.
  • hyperlydian — relating to the highest scale or mode in ancient Greek music
  • hypermarket — a combined supermarket and department store.
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