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12-letter words containing g, o, p, h

  • ghost shrimp — a shrimplike crustacean of the genus Callianassa, of the Pacific coast of North America, having a pinkish, transparent body.
  • glossography — a glossator.
  • glossophobia — The fear of public speaking.
  • glyphography — a plate-making process in which an electrotype is made from an engraved copper plate
  • glyptography — the description or study of engraved gems or other stones.
  • gold therapy — administration of gold salts as a treatment for disease, especially rheumatoid arthritis.
  • golden perch — a freshwater food fish, Plectroplites ambiguus, that inhabits inland waters of Australia.
  • gopher snake — a bullsnake, Pituophis melanoleucus, of western North America, that invades burrows to prey on rodents.
  • gopher state — Minnesota (used as a nickname).
  • gospel choir — a choir performing gospel music
  • gospel truth — an unquestionably true statement, fact, etc.
  • governorship — the duties, term in office, etc., of a governor.
  • grace hopper — (person)   US Navy Rear Admiral Grace Brewster Hopper (1906-12-09 to 1992-01-01), née Grace Brewster Murray. Hopper is believed to have concieved the concept of the compiler with the A-0 in 1952. She also developed the first commercial high-level language, which eventually evolved into COBOL. She worked on the Mark I computer with Howard Aiken and with BINAC in 1949. She is credited with having coined the term "debug", and the adage "it is always easier to ask forgiveness than it is to get permission" (with various wordings), which has been the guiding principle in sysadmin decisions ever since. See also the entries debug and bug. Hopper is buried at Arlington National Cemetery. In 1994, the US Navy named a new ship, the guided-missile destroyer USS Hopper, after her.
  • gramophonist — a person who uses a gramophone
  • graph theory — the branch of mathematics dealing with linear graphs.
  • graphologist — the study of handwriting, especially when regarded as an expression of the writer's character, personality, abilities, etc.
  • graphophobia — Fear or dislike of writing.
  • graphophonic — a phonograph for recording and reproducing sounds on wax records.
  • 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.
  • grasshoppers — Plural form of grasshopper.
  • group theory — the branch of mathematics that deals with the structure of mathematical groups and mappings between them.
  • gymnosophist — one of a group of Jainist philosophers, existing from ancient times to c1000, characterized by refusal to wear clothes and the abandonment of caste marks; a member of the Digambara sect.
  • hagia sophia — flourished 6th century a.d, Byzantine engineer. He was one of the architects of Hagia Sophia; (originally an Orthodox cathedral and currently a museum in Istanbul, Turkey).
  • hagiographer — one of the writers of the Hagiographa.
  • hagiographic — Of or pertaining to hagiography.
  • halogen lamp — a gas-filled, high-intensity incandescent lamp having a tungsten filament and containing a small amount of a halogen, such as iodine, that vaporizes on heating and redeposits any evaporated tungsten particles back onto the filament: used especially in motion-picture projectors and automobile headlights.
  • hanging post — a post from which a door, gate, etc., is hung.
  • haptoglobins — Plural form of haptoglobin.
  • harmonograph — an instrument using a system of pendulums to produce geometric images
  • hedge hyssop — any plant of the genus Gratiola, a bitter herb used medicinally.
  • hedgehopping — Present participle of hedgehop.
  • helicographs — Plural form of helicograph.
  • heliographed — Simple past tense and past participle of heliograph.
  • heliographer — (obsolete) Photographer.
  • heliographic — a device for signaling by means of a movable mirror that reflects beams of light, especially sunlight, to a distance.
  • hepaticology — the scientific study of bryophyte plants known as hepatics or liverworts
  • hepatogenous — originating in the liver
  • hepatomegaly — an abnormal enlargement of the liver, usually associated with liver disease or heart failure.
  • herpetologic — Alternative form of herpetological.
  • heterography — spelling different from that in current use.
  • hieroglyphic — Also, hieroglyphical. designating or pertaining to a pictographic script, particularly that of the ancient Egyptians, in which many of the symbols are conventionalized, recognizable pictures of the things represented.
  • hierographer — a writer of hierographs
  • hierographic — of or relating to hierographs
  • high concept — a simple and often striking idea or premise, as of a story or film, that lends itself to easy promotion and marketing.
  • high opinion — a favourable opinion
  • high polymer — a polymer composed of a large number of monomers.
  • high profile — a deliberately conspicuous manner of living or operating.
  • high-powered — extremely energetic, dynamic, and capable: high-powered executives.
  • high-profile — prominent publicly
  • high-protein — (of a food) rich in proteins
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