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11-letter words containing e, n, c, r, a

  • handcrafted — handicraft.
  • handcrafter — One who handcrafts or engages in handcraft or handicraft.
  • 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.
  • 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).
  • harken back — hearken back (see phrase under hearken)
  • heartaching — emotional pain or distress; sorrow; grief; anguish.
  • hemicranial — Relating to hemicrania.
  • heraclitean — of or relating to Heraclitus or his philosophy.
  • hercegovina — Herzegovina.
  • herculaneum — an ancient city in SW Italy, on the Bay of Naples: buried along with Pompeii by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in a.d. 79; partially excavated.
  • heteroscian — a name applied to the people who live in temperate zones, so given because in these areas shadows created by the sun at noon will fall in opposite directions
  • hibernacula — Plural form of hibernaculum.
  • hierodeacon — a monk who is also a deacon.
  • hinderances — Plural form of hinderance.
  • homonuclear — a homonuclear molecule is composed of atoms of the same element or isotope and all of its nuclei are alike
  • horn clause — (logic)   A set of atomic literals with at most one positive literal. Usually written L <- L1, ..., Ln or <- L1, ..., Ln where n>=0, "<-" means "is implied by" and comma stands for conjuction ("AND"). If L is false the clause is regarded as a goal. Horn clauses can express a subset of statements of first order logic. The name "Horn Clause" comes from the logician Alfred Horn, who first pointed out the significance of such clauses in 1951, in the article "On sentences which are true of direct unions of algebras", Journal of Symbolic Logic, 16, 14-21. A definite clause is a Horn clause that has exactly one positive literal.
  • horseracing — Alternative form of horse racing.
  • hue and cry — Early English Law. the pursuit of a felon or an offender with loud outcries or clamor to give an alarm.
  • hydromancer — One who practices hydromancy.
  • hypercapnia — Excessive carbon dioxide in the bloodstream, typically caused by inadequate respiration.
  • hypocentral — (geology) Of or pertaining to the hypocentre of an earthquake.
  • icarian sea — the part of the Aegean Sea between Turkey and the Greek islands of Patmos and Leros.
  • icebreaking — Serving the purpose of breaking ice.
  • icosahedron — a solid figure having 20 faces.
  • importances — the quality or state of being important; consequence; significance.
  • imprecating — Present participle of imprecate.
  • imprecation — the act of imprecating; cursing.
  • in articles — formerly, undergoing training, according to the terms of a written contract, in the legal profession
  • in chambers — in the privacy of a judge's chambers
  • in chancery — (of a suit) pending in a court of equity
  • in practice — from a practical point of view
  • incarcerate — to imprison; confine.
  • incardinate — to institute as a cardinal.
  • incarnadine — blood-red; crimson.
  • incarvillea — any plant of the genus Incarvillea, native to China, of which some species are grown as garden or greenhouse plants for their large usually carmine-coloured trumpet-shaped flowers, esp I. delavayi: family Bignoniaceae
  • incertainty — (obsolete) Uncertainty.
  • incinerated — Simple past tense and past participle of incinerate.
  • incinerates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of incinerate.
  • incinerator — a furnace or apparatus for burning trash, garbage, etc., to ashes.
  • include war — Excessive multi-leveled including within a discussion thread, a practice that tends to annoy readers. In a forum with high-traffic newsgroups, such as Usenet, this can lead to flames and the urge to start a kill file.
  • incoronated — crowned
  • incorporate — to form into a legal corporation.
  • incorporeal — not corporeal or material; insubstantial.
  • incrassated — Simple past tense and past participle of incrassate.
  • increasable — Pertaining to something that can be increased.
  • increasedly — to make greater, as in number, size, strength, or quality; augment; add to: to increase taxes.
  • increaseful — full of increase; fertile; fruitful
  • incremation — Burning; especially, the act of burning a dead body; cremation.
  • incremental — increasing or adding on, especially in a regular series: small, incremental tax hikes.
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