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11-letter words containing f, i, r, e, h, a

  • hard-fisted — stingy; miserly; closefisted.
  • harvestfish — a butterfish of the genus Peprilus, especially P. alepidotus of Atlantic waters.
  • hereinafter — afterward in this document, statement, etc.
  • hill farmer — a farmer on a hill farm
  • idler shaft — a shaft carrying one or more gearwheels that idles between a driver shaft and a driven shaft, usually to reverse the direction of rotation or provide different spacing of gearwheels, esp in a gearbox
  • lanternfish — any of several small, deep-sea fishes of the family Myctophidae, having rows of luminous organs along each side, certain species of which migrate to the surface at night.
  • leatherfish — a filefish.
  • off the air — a mixture of nitrogen, oxygen, and minute amounts of other gases that surrounds the earth and forms its atmosphere.
  • pin-feather — an undeveloped feather before the web portions have expanded.
  • rankshifted — that has been shifted from one linguistic rank to another
  • riefenstahl — Leni [ley-nee] /ˈleɪ ni/ (Show IPA), 1902–2003, German film director.
  • sheriffalty — shrievalty.
  • shift gears — change speed manually in a vehicle
  • take fright — be scared off
  • the giraffe — the constellation Camelopardalis
  • warfighters — Plural form of warfighter.
  • weatherfish — any of several loaches of the genus Misgurnus, especially the European M. fossilis, which shows increased activity in response to changes in barometric pressure.
  • wharfingers — Plural form of wharfinger.
  • white dwarf — a star, approximately the size of the earth, that has undergone gravitational collapse and is in the final stage of evolution for low-mass stars, beginning hot and white and ending cold and dark (black dwarf)
  • white friar — a Carmelite friar: so called from the distinctive white cloak worn by the order.
  • whitefriars — a district in central London, England.
  • zebra finch — a small Australian waxbill, Poephila guttata, that has black-and-white barred plumage and a chestnut ear patch: popular as a cage bird.
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