0%

12-letter words containing f, e, a, t, h

  • featherbrain — a foolish or giddy person; scatterbrain.
  • featherheads — Plural form of featherhead.
  • featheriness — The state or quality of being feathery.
  • featherlight — extremely light; light as a feather.
  • 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.
  • feuchtwanger — Lion [lee-awn] /ˈli ɔn/ (Show IPA), 1884–1958, German novelist and dramatist.
  • fianchettoed — Simple past tense and past participle of fianchetto.
  • fifth estate — any class or group in society other than the nobility, the clergy, the middle class, and the press.
  • fifth-grader — a student in the fifth grade of the American education system
  • fire hydrant — a hydrant for use in extinguishing fires.
  • fire watcher — a person who watches for fires, esp those caused by aerial bombardment
  • firebreather — A performer who creates fireballs by breathing a fine mist of fuel over an open flame.
  • flabberghast — (archaic) Alternative form of flabbergast.
  • flame stitch — an ornamental stitch, used on bedspreads, upholstery fabrics, and the like, producing rows of ogees in various colors.
  • flamethrower — a weapon, either mounted or portable, that sprays ignited incendiary fuel for some distance.
  • flannelmouth — a person whose speech is thick, slow, or halting.
  • flat-chested — If you describe a woman as flat-chested, you mean that she has small breasts.
  • flat-earther — a person who adheres to the idea that the earth is flat.
  • flesh-eating — habitually eating flesh; carnivorous
  • fluoranthene — (organic compound) A polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon consisting of a benzene ring attached to each of the rings of a naphthalene molecule; it is carcinogenic, and is a product of incomplete combustion.
  • fly the flag — to represent or show support for one's country, an organization, etc
  • focal length — the distance from a focal point of a lens or mirror to the corresponding principal plane. Symbol: f.
  • foolhardiest — Superlative form of foolhardy.
  • foregathered — Simple past tense and past participle of foregather.
  • fotheringhay — a village in NE Northamptonshire, in E England, near Peterborough: Mary, Queen of Scots, imprisoned here and executed 1587.
  • fountainhead — a fountain or spring from which a stream flows; the head or source of a stream.
  • fourth grade — school year: age 9-10
  • free-hearted — light-hearted; spontaneous; frank; generous.
  • freight yard — a place on a rail network where freight trains are made up or broken up
  • french pleat — curtain, draperies
  • french toast — bread dipped in a batter of egg and milk and sautéed until brown, usually served with syrup or sprinkled with sugar and cinnamon.
  • gemeinschaft — an association of individuals having sentiments, tastes, and attitudes in common; fellowship.
  • gesellschaft — an association of individuals for common goals, as for entertainment, intellectual, or cultural purposes or for business reasons.
  • get ahead of — to outdo or excel
  • get ahold of — to get in touch with
  • grandfathers — Plural form of grandfather.
  • half brother — brother (def 2).
  • half leather — a type of book binding consisting of a leather binding on the spine and, sometimes, the corners, with paper or cloth sides.
  • half section — a part that is cut off or separated.
  • half-brother — brother (def 2).
  • half-century — a period of 100 years.
  • half-hearted — having or showing little enthusiasm: a halfhearted attempt to work.
  • half-leather — half binding.
  • half-section — a part that is cut off or separated.
  • half-starved — to die or perish from lack of food or nourishment.
  • halfwittedly — In a halfwitted manner.
  • handicrafter — One who engages in handicrafts.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?