10-letter words containing g, o, r, h, e
- shower gel — liquid soap product
- smothering — to stifle or suffocate, as by smoke or other means of preventing free breathing.
- sphenogram — a cuneiform character.
- stenograph — any of various keyboard instruments, somewhat resembling a typewriter, used for writing in shorthand, as by means of phonetic or arbitrary symbols.
- sugarhouse — a shed or other building where maple syrup or maple sugar is made.
- the dragon — the constellation Draco
- thereamong — amid or amongst
- thermogram — a graphic or visual record produced by thermography.
- thermology — the study or science of heat
- thornhedge — any hedge containing trees, bushes or shrubs that bear thorns
- thrombogen — prothrombin.
- tiger moth — any of numerous moths of the family Arctiidae, many of which have conspicuously striped or spotted wings.
- trichogyne — a hairlike prolongation of a carpogonium, serving as a receptive organ for the spermatium.
- underbough — a low-lying tree branch
- untogether — disorganized; confused; chaotic: Right after the divorce was a very untogether time for me.
- vectograph — a technology that uses special glasses to see a photographic image between two plastic sheets as three dimensional
- venography — x-ray examination of a vein or veins following injection of a radiopaque substance.
- vouchering — a person or thing that vouches.
- weighboard — a thin layer (e.g. shale or clay) between bands of thicker strata (e.g. limestone or sandstone)
- weightroom — an exercise room with weightlifting equipment.
- whiggamore — one of a group of 17th-century Scottish insurgents
- wholegrain — A cereal grain that contains cereal germ, endosperm, and bran, in contrast to refined grains, which retain only the endosperm.
- woolgather — to engage in woolgathering.
- xenography — The process of surgically transplanting organs or tissue between different species.
- xerography — an electrostatic printing process for copying text or graphics whereby areas on a sheet of paper corresponding to the image areas of the original are sensitized with a charge of static electricity so that, when powdered with a toner carrying an opposite charge, only the charged areas retain the toner, which is then fused to the paper to make it permanent.
- xerophagia — The eating of dry food.