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11-letter words containing e, n, m

  • half-minute — 30 seconds
  • hamate bone — a wedgelike bone on the side of the wrist connecting the wrist with the fourth and fifth metacarpals, which connect to the ring and little fingers
  • hammer down — a tool consisting of a solid head, usually of metal, set crosswise on a handle, used for beating metals, driving nails, etc.
  • hammer pond — an artificial pond for maintaining a head of water at a water mill.
  • hammersteinOscar, 1847?–1919, U.S. theatrical manager, born in Germany.
  • hammerstone — an ancient stone tool used as a hammer, as for chipping flint, processing food, or breaking up bones.
  • hamstringed — (in humans and other primates) any of the tendons that bound the ham of the knee.
  • hand-loomed — handwoven.
  • harassments — Plural form of harassment.
  • hardwareman — (obsolete) An ironmonger.
  • harem pants — a kind of baggy trousers worn by women, made of lightweight fabric and closefitting at the ankles
  • harmfulness — causing or capable of causing harm; injurious: a harmful idea; a harmful habit.
  • harmonizers — Plural form of harmonizer.
  • hatchet man — a professional murderer.
  • hatemongers — Plural form of hatemonger.
  • haute-marne — a department in E France. 2416 sq. mi. (6255 sq. km). Capital: Chaumont.
  • have a moan — If you have a moan, you complain about something.
  • head margin — the empty space between the first line or other printed element on a page and the top of the page.
  • hegelianism — the philosophy of Hegel and his followers, characterized by the use of the Hegelian dialectic.
  • hegemonical — having hegemony, or dominance: the ruling party's hegemonic control of all facets of society.
  • hello money — a charge made by a retailer to a supplier for introducing the supplier's goods to its stores
  • helminthics — Plural form of helminthic.
  • helminthoid — shaped like a helminth; vermiform; wormlike.
  • helminthous — having intestinal worms
  • helmsperson — A helmsman or helmswoman.
  • hem and haw — the utterance or sound of “hem.”.
  • hemanalysis — an analysis, especially of the chemical constituents, of the blood.
  • hematoxylin — a colorless or pale-yellow, crystalline compound, C 16 H 14 O 6 ·3H 2 O, the coloring material of logwood: used as a mordant dye and as an indicator.
  • hemeprotein — (protein) Any conjugated protein containing heme as the prosthetic group.
  • hemerythrin — a type of protein responsible for oxygen transportation in some marine invertebrates
  • hemianopsia — any of several conditions in which there is blindness in half of the visual field, involving one or both eyes.
  • hemianoptic — suffering from hemiopia, blind in half the field of vision
  • hemicranial — Relating to hemicrania.
  • hemielytron — hemelytron.
  • hemipterans — Plural form of hemipteran.
  • hemisecting — Present participle of hemisect.
  • hemisection — to cut into two equal parts; to bisect, especially along a medial longitudinal plane.
  • hemiterpene — (originally) any of a class of monocyclic hydrocarbons of the formula C 10 H 16 , obtained from plants.
  • hemodynamic — the branch of physiology dealing with the forces involved in the circulation of the blood.
  • hemoprotein — Alternative spelling of hemeprotein.
  • hemosiderin — a yellowish-brown protein containing iron, derived chiefly from hemoglobin and found in body tissue and phagocytes, especially as the result of disorders in iron metabolism and the breakdown of red blood cells.
  • hemp nettle — a coarse weed of the genus Galeopsis, of the mint family, resembling hemp in appearance and having bristly hairs like the nettle.
  • 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.
  • hermeneutic — of or relating to hermeneutics; interpretative; explanatory.
  • hexahemeron — hexaemeron.
  • hibernicism — an idiom or characteristic peculiar to Irish English or to the Irish.
  • hieronymite — a member of a congregation of hermits named after St. Jerome.
  • high german — the group of West Germanic languages that in a.d. c400–c500 underwent the second consonant shift described by Grimm's Law. Abbreviation: HG.
  • high-income — of or relating to those with a larger income than the average.
  • high-minded — having or showing high, exalted principles or feelings.
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