0%

13-letter words containing h, a, e, m, g

  • methylglyoxal — pyruvic aldehyde.
  • microteaching — a scaled-down teaching procedure with a few students under controlled conditions, often videotaped in order to analyze teaching techniques and develop new teaching skills.
  • might as well — have no reason not to
  • mimeographing — Present participle of mimeograph.
  • money-changer — a person whose business is the exchange of currency, usually of different countries, at a fixed or official rate.
  • moneychangers — Plural form of moneychanger.
  • morphographer — a person who scientifically describes form
  • mouthwatering — very appetizing in appearance, aroma, or description: a mouth-watering dessert.
  • much-maligned — If you describe someone or something as much-maligned, you mean that they are often criticized by people, but you think the criticism is unfair or exaggerated because they have good qualities too.
  • mycetophagous — That feeds on fungi.
  • mythographies — Plural form of mythography.
  • night jasmine — Also called hursinghar, sad tree, tree of sadness. a jasminelike, Indian shrub or small tree, Nyctanthes arbor-tristis, of the verbena family, having fragrant, white and orange flowers that bloom at night.
  • nightwatchmen — Plural form of nightwatchman.
  • parma heights — a city in NE Ohio, near Cleveland.
  • pharyngectomy — excision of part or all of the pharynx.
  • phase diagram — a graph, usually using temperature, pressure, and composition as coordinates, indicating the regions of stability of the various phases of a system.
  • phototelegram — a telegram that is sent by means of phototelegraphy
  • phrygian mode — an authentic church mode represented on the white keys of a keyboard instrument by an ascending scale from E to E.
  • play the game — an amusement or pastime: children's games.
  • plethysmogram — the recording of a plethysmograph.
  • pneumatograph — pneumograph.
  • polygamophile — a person who approves of or countenances polygamy, especially as practiced by others.
  • pythian games — (in ancient Greece) the second most important Panhellenic festival, celebrated in the third year of each Olympiad near Delphi. The four-year period between celebrations was known as a Pythiad (ˈpɪθɪˌæd )
  • regime change — the transition from one political regime to another, esp through concerted political or military action
  • rogue's march — a derisive tune played to accompany a person's expulsion from a regiment, community, etc.
  • run the gamut — The gamut of something is the complete range of things of that kind, or a wide variety of things of that kind.
  • shaving cream — a preparation, as of soap and free fatty acid, that is lathered and applied to the face to soften and condition the beard for shaving.
  • sheep farming — agriculture: sheep raising
  • shell program — A shell program is a basic computer program that provides a framework within which the user can develop the program to suit their own needs.
  • speech making — act of addressing the public formally
  • sperm washing — a technique that separates sperm from the seminal fluid, used especially for isolating active sperm for artificial insemination.
  • stagecoachman — the driver or operator of a stagecoach
  • stamen blight — a disease of blackberries, characterized by a gray, powdery mass of spores covering the anthers, caused by a fungus, Hapalosphaeria deformans.
  • steam heating — a heating system utilizing steam circulated through radiators and pipes.
  • straight time — the time or number of hours established as standard for a specific work period in a particular industry, usually computed on the basis of a workweek and fixed variously from 35 to 40 hours.
  • surge chamber — a chamber for absorbing surge from a liquid or gas.
  • team teaching — a system whereby two or more teachers pool their skills, knowledge, etc, to teach combined classes
  • the hermitage — an art museum in St Petersburg, originally a palace built by Catherine the Great
  • thermostating — a device, including a relay actuated by thermal conduction or convection, that functions to establish and maintain a desired temperature automatically or signals a change in temperature for manual adjustment.
  • thremmatology — the science of breeding or propagating animals and plants under domestication.
  • tzom gedaliah — a Jewish fast day observed on the third day of the month of Tishri in memory of the treacherous murder of Gedaliah, Jewish governor of Judah appointed by King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylonia.
  • watch meeting — a religious meeting or service on watch night, terminating on the arrival of the new year.
  • wedding march — a musical composition played during a wedding procession.
  • weighted mean — a mean that is computed with extra weight given to one or more elements of the sample.
  • whigmaleeries — a whim; notion.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?