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9-letter words containing h, a, s, t

  • choralist — a person who sings in a chorus or ensemble
  • chordates — belonging or pertaining to the phylum Chordata, comprising the true vertebrates and those animals having a notochord, as the lancelets and tunicates.
  • christian — A Christian is someone who follows the teachings of Jesus Christ.
  • christina — 1626–89, queen of Sweden (1632–54), daughter of Gustavus Adolphus, noted particularly for her patronage of literature
  • christmas — Christmas is a Christian festival when the birth of Jesus Christ is celebrated. Christmas is celebrated on the 25th of December.
  • chromates — Plural form of chromate.
  • citharist — a player of the cithara
  • classpath — (programming) an argument that tells the Java virtual machine where to look for user-defined classes and packages when running Java programs.
  • cleanthes — ?300–?232 bc, Greek philosopher: succeeded Zeno as head of the Stoic school
  • clianthus — any Australian or New Zealand plant of the leguminous genus Clianthus, with ornamental clusters of slender scarlet flowers
  • coauthors — Plural form of coauthor.
  • cohobates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cohobate.
  • crapshoot — If you describe something as a crapshoot, you mean that what happens depends entirely on luck or chance.
  • crash out — If someone crashes out somewhere, they fall asleep where they are because they are very tired or drunk.
  • crash-hot — extremely impressive
  • daghestan — a constituent republic of S Russia, on the Caspian Sea: annexed from Persia in 1813; rich mineral resources. Capital: Makhachkala. Pop: 2 584 200 (2002). Area: 50 278 sq km (19 416 sq miles)
  • dashlight — a light illuminating the dashboard of an automobile, esp at night
  • datasheet — A document summarizing the performance and other technical characteristics of a product.
  • daughters — Plural form of daughter.
  • day shift — a group of workers who work a shift during the daytime in an industry or occupation where a night shift or a back shift is also worked
  • daylights — consciousness or wits (esp in the phrases scare, knock, or beat the (living) daylights out of someone)
  • deathbeds — Plural form of deathbed.
  • deathless — immortal, esp because of greatness; everlasting
  • deathsman — an executioner
  • decastich — a poem that consists of ten lines
  • diatheses — Plural form of diathesis.
  • diathesis — a hereditary or acquired susceptibility of the body to one or more diseases
  • dishwater — water in which dishes are, or have been, washed.
  • draw shot — a stroke that imparts a backward spin to the cue ball, causing it to roll back after striking the object ball. Compare follow shot (def 2).
  • drawsheet — a narrow sheet, often used on hospital beds, placed under a patient's buttocks and often over a rubber sheet, that can easily be removed if soiled.
  • duathlons — Plural form of duathlon.
  • dust bath — the action of a bird of driving dust into its feathers, which may dislodge parasites
  • dust head — a habitual user of angel dust.
  • dysthesia — an unusual or disagreeable feeling in or on the body compared to crawling or burning
  • dysthymia — depression; despondency or a tendency to be despondent.
  • earthfast — relating to a method of building or to buildings that have no foundations but are supported by posts knocked into the ground
  • earthrise — the rising of the earth above the horizon of the moon or other celestial body, viewed from that body's surface or from a spacecraft orbiting it.
  • earthstar — a fungus of the genus Geaster, having an outer covering that splits into the form of a star.
  • east goth — an Ostrogoth.
  • eastleigh — a borough in Hampshire, S England.
  • eightsman — a member of an eight-man rowing team
  • elephants — Plural form of elephant.
  • elisabeth — a feminine name
  • empathies — Plural form of empathy.
  • empathise — (British) alternative spelling of empathize.
  • emphatics — Plural form of emphatic.
  • encanthis — a tumour of the eye
  • ensheathe — Enclose (an organism, tissue, structure, etc.) in or as in a sheath.
  • enswathed — Simple past tense and past participle of enswathe.
  • enthralls — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of enthrall.
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