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12-letter words containing g, a, r, e, t, h

  • earth-grazer — an asteroid in an orbit that takes it close to the earth
  • earth-moving — Earth-moving equipment is machinery that is used for digging and moving large amounts of soil.
  • earthshaking — imperiling, challenging, or affecting basic beliefs, attitudes, relationships, etc.
  • ectypography — a form of etching or engraving in which the design is produced in relief
  • eighth grade — the eighth year of school, when students are 12 to 14 years old
  • electrograph — A machine used in gravure printing.
  • ethical drug — a drug which is only available legally with a doctor's prescription or consent
  • ethnographer — One who practices ethnography.
  • ethnographic — Relating to ethnography.
  • exhilarating — Making one feel very happy, animated, or elated; thrilling.
  • farsightedly — In a farsighted manner.
  • farthingales — Plural form of farthingale.
  • farthingdale — (British, dated, 13th-19th C.) A unit of area equal to one quarter of an acre.
  • farthingless — without a farthing, having no money
  • father image — a person substituted in one's mind for one's father and often the object of emotions felt toward the father
  • featherlight — extremely light; light as a feather.
  • feuchtwanger — Lion [lee-awn] /ˈli ɔn/ (Show IPA), 1884–1958, German novelist and dramatist.
  • fifth-grader — a student in the fifth grade of the American education system
  • flabberghast — (archaic) Alternative form of flabbergast.
  • 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.
  • fourth grade — school year: age 9-10
  • freight yard — a place on a rail network where freight trains are made up or broken up
  • gaithersburg — a town in central Maryland.
  • galactophore — a galactophorous duct.
  • galactorrhea — an abnormally abundant flow of milk in a lactating woman.
  • gametophores — Plural form of gametophore.
  • garnishments — Plural form of garnishment.
  • gate-crasher — a person who attends or enters a social function without an invitation, a theater without a ticket, etc.
  • gatecrashers — Plural form of gatecrasher.
  • gatecrashing — Present participle of gatecrash.
  • gauge theory — a type of theory of elementary particles designed to explain the strong, weak, and electromagnetic interactions in terms of exchange of virtual particles
  • gazetteerish — in the style of a gazetteer
  • gene therapy — the application of genetic engineering to the transplantation of genes into human cells in order to cure a disease caused by a genetic defect, as a missing enzyme.
  • geothermally — By geothermal means, especially by means of geothermal energy.
  • german sixth — (in musical harmony) an augmented sixth chord having a major third and a perfect fifth between the root and the augmented sixth
  • get anywhere — to be successful
  • giant hornet — any large, stinging paper wasp of the family Vespidae, as Vespa crabro (giant hornet) introduced into the U.S. from Europe, or Vespula maculata (bald-faced hornet or white-faced hornet) of North America.
  • glatt kosher — prepared for eating according to the dietary laws followed by Hasidic Jews, which differ somewhat from those followed by other observers of kashruth: glatt kosher meat.
  • gnatcatchers — Plural form of gnatcatcher.
  • goddaughters — Plural form of goddaughter.
  • gold therapy — administration of gold salts as a treatment for disease, especially rheumatoid arthritis.
  • good-hearted — kind or generous; considerate; benevolent.
  • gopher state — Minnesota (used as a nickname).
  • graduateship — the time or condition of being a graduate
  • grandaughter — Alternative spelling of granddaughter.
  • grandfathers — Plural form of grandfather.
  • grandmothers — Plural form of grandmother.
  • graph theory — the branch of mathematics dealing with linear graphs.
  • grapple shot — a grapnellike projectile fired from a gun and used as a hold for the end of a line in rescue operations or in kedging.
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