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8-letter words containing e, t, h

  • atheists — Plural form of atheist.
  • atheldom — (rare) The state or condition of being athel or noble; nobility.
  • atheling — (in Anglo-Saxon England) a prince of any of the royal dynasties
  • atheneum — (initial capital letter) a sanctuary of Athena at Athens, built by the Roman emperor Hadrian, and frequented by poets and scholars.
  • athenian — a native or inhabitant of Athens
  • atherine — any of several small fish of the genus Atherina
  • athermal — (physics) Describing any process that does not involve either heat or a change in temperature.
  • atheroma — a fatty deposit on or within the inner lining of an artery, often causing an obstruction to the blood flow
  • atherton — Mike, full name Michael Andrew Atherton. born 1968, English cricketer: played for Lancashire (1987–2001) and England (1989–2001); captain of England (1993–1998)
  • athetize — to reject as not genuine
  • athetoid — (symptom) characterised by athetosis.
  • athletes — Plural form of athlete.
  • athletic — Athletic means relating to athletes and athletics.
  • athonite — of or relating to Mount Athos.
  • attached — If you are attached to someone or something, you like them very much.
  • attacher — Someone who attaches.
  • attaches — to fasten or affix; join; connect: to attach a photograph to an application with a staple.
  • authored — a person who writes a novel, poem, essay, etc.; the composer of a literary work, as distinguished from a compiler, translator, editor, or copyist.
  • availeth — Archaic third-person singular form of avail.
  • aweather — towards the weather
  • b-method — (programming, tool)   A system for rigorous or formal development of software using the notion of Abstract Machines to specify and design software systems. The B-Method is supported by the B-Toolkit. Abstract Machines are specified using the Abstract Machine Notation (AMN) which is in turn based on the mathematical theory of Generalised Substitutions.
  • barathea — a fabric made of silk and wool or cotton and rayon, used esp for coats
  • barghest — (in the North of England, esp Yorkshire) a goblin that appears in the shape of a dog as an omen of death or other misfortune
  • base hit — a play in which the batter hits a fair ball and gets on base without benefit of an opponent's error and without forcing out a runner already on base
  • bashment — (slang, countable, especially Jamaican) A party or rave.
  • bathcube — a cube of soluble scented material for use in a bath
  • bathetic — containing or displaying bathos
  • bathless — without a bath
  • bathorse — a horse which carries a military officer's baggage; a military packhorse
  • bathrobe — A bathrobe is a loose piece of clothing made of the same material as towels. You wear it before or after you have a bath or a swim.
  • bayreuth — a city in E Germany, in NE Bavaria: home and burial place of Richard Wagner; annual festivals of his music. Pop: 74 818 (2003 est)
  • beathing — Present participle of beath.
  • bebother — To bring trouble upon.
  • beclothe — to put clothes on (someone)
  • bedights — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bedight.
  • bedlight — a bedlamp.
  • bedright — a right expected in the marital bed
  • bedsheet — a sheet for a bed
  • bedworth — a town in central England, in N Warwickshire. Pop: 30 001 (2001)
  • bee moth — any of various pyralid moths, such as the wax moth, whose larvae live in the nests of bees or wasps, feeding on nest materials and host larvae
  • beechnut — the small brown triangular edible nut of the beech tree
  • behatted — wearing a hat
  • behemoth — If you refer to something as a behemoth, you mean that it is extremely large, and often that it is unpleasant, inefficient, or difficult to manage.
  • behistun — a village in W Iran by the ancient road from Ecbatana to Babylon. On a nearby cliff is an inscription by Darius in Old Persian, Elamite, and Babylonian describing his enthronement
  • beknight — to esteem
  • benchtop — a flat surface area
  • benthoal — relating to deep-sea plants and animals
  • bequeath — If you bequeath your money or property to someone, you legally state that they should have it when you die.
  • berthage — a place for mooring boats
  • berthing — a shelflike sleeping space, as on a ship, airplane, or railroad car.
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