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

  • shechitah — the slaughtering of animals for food by a duly certified person in the manner prescribed by Jewish law.
  • shiftable — able or designed to be shifted, changed, or removed: shiftable furniture.
  • shirtband — a band of material sewn into a shirt for stiffening, finishing, or the like, as a neckband to which the collar is sewn or buttoned.
  • shirttail — the part of a shirt below the waistline.
  • shitfaced — very drunk.
  • shorthair — a domestic cat with a coat of short, thick hair; a cat of a shorthaired breed.
  • shulamite — an epithet meaning “princess,” applied to the bride in the Song of Solomon 6:13.
  • sialolith — a hard deposit occurring in a salivary gland
  • sight gag — a comic effect produced by visual means rather than by spoken lines, as in a play or motion picture.
  • sightsman — a tourist guide
  • siphonate — (of molluscs) having a syphon
  • sitz bath — a chairlike bathtub in which the thighs and hips are immersed in warm water, usually as part of a therapeutic treatment.
  • sitz-bath — a chairlike bathtub in which the thighs and hips are immersed in warm water, usually as part of a therapeutic treatment.
  • sixth man — a team's best substitute.
  • smash hit — a person or thing that is overwhelmingly successful or popular: Both the play and the movie based on it were smash hits.
  • snatching — to make a sudden effort to seize something, as with the hand; grab (usually followed by at).
  • sociopath — a person with a psychopathic personality whose behavior is antisocial, often criminal, and who lacks a sense of moral responsibility or social conscience.
  • soft hail — snow pellets.
  • spaghetti — a white, starchy pasta of Italian origin that is made in the form of long strings, boiled, and served with any of a variety of meat, tomato, or other sauces.
  • sphaerite — an aluminium phosphate
  • stairhead — the top of a staircase; top landing.
  • stanchion — an upright bar, beam, post, or support, as in a window, stall, ship, etc.
  • starlight — the light emanating from the stars.
  • starshine — starlight
  • startlish — (of a horse) easily startled
  • statolith — Zoology. any of the granules of lime, sand, etc., contained within a statocyst.
  • stay with — to spend some time in a place, in a situation, with a person or group, etc.: He stayed in the army for ten years.
  • steamship — a large commercial vessel, especially one driven by steam.
  • stepchair — a set of steps folding into a chair.
  • stephanie — a female given name.
  • stomachic — of or relating to the stomach; gastric.
  • straights — without a bend, angle, or curve; not curved; direct: a straight path.
  • strychnia — Pharmacology. a colorless, crystalline poison, C 2 1 H 2 2 N 2 O 2 , obtained chiefly by extraction from the seeds of nux vomica, formerly used as a central nervous system stimulant.
  • sulphatic — sulphuric, of or pertaining to a sulphate
  • switchman — a person who has charge of a switch on a railroad.
  • sympathin — a substance released at certain sympathetic nerve endings: thought to be identical with adrenaline
  • synanthic — relating to synanthy
  • ta ch'ing — Ch'ing.
  • tachyonic — characteristic of a tachyon
  • tahsildar — (in India) a collector for, or official of, the revenue department.
  • taillight — a light, usually red, at the rear of an automobile, train, etc.
  • tailwheel — a wheel fitted to the rear of a vehicle, esp the landing wheel under the tail of an aircraft
  • tall ship — type of large sailing ship
  • tallchiefMaria, 1925–2013, U.S. ballet dancer.
  • tallowish — resembling tallow; tallow-like
  • tamazight — a Berber language spoken in Morocco.
  • tanghinin — the active ingredient in tanghin
  • taoiseach — The prime minister of the Republic of Ireland is called the Taoiseach.
  • tarnished — metal: discolored
  • tauchnitz — Karl Christoph Traugott [kahrl kris-tawf trou-gawt] /ˈkɑrl ˈkrɪs tɔf ˈtraʊ gɔt/ (Show IPA), 1761–1836, and his son, Karl Christian Philipp [kris-tee-ahn fee-lip,, fil-ip] /ˈkrɪs tiˌɑn ˈfi lɪp,, ˈfɪl ɪp/ (Show IPA) 1798–1884, German printers and publishers.
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