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11-letter words containing h, e, a, t, c, o

  • house-craft — skill in domestic management
  • hovercrafts — (nonstandard) Plural form of hovercraft.
  • huitlacoche — Corn smut prepared as a delicacy.
  • humectation — A moistening.
  • hypocentral — (geology) Of or pertaining to the hypocentre of an earthquake.
  • hypothecary — of or relating to a hypothec.
  • hypothecate — to pledge to a creditor as security without delivering over; mortgage.
  • isolecithal — homolecithal.
  • karate chop — a sharp blow used in karate, usually delivered by a slanting stroke with the side of the hand.
  • karate-chop — a sharp blow used in karate, usually delivered by a slanting stroke with the side of the hand.
  • lackey moth — a bombycid moth, Malacosoma neustria, whose brightly striped larvae live at first in a communal web often on fruit trees, of which they may become a pest
  • leaf blotch — a symptom or phase of certain especially fungal diseases of plants, characterized by necrotic discoloration of the leaves.
  • lycanthrope — a person affected with lycanthropy.
  • lythraceous — belonging to the Lythraceae, the loosestrife family of plants.
  • machicolate — to provide with machicolations.
  • macintoshes — Plural form of macintosh.
  • macrophytes — Plural form of macrophyte.
  • mechatronic — relating to mechatronics
  • melanchthon — Philipp [fil-ip;; German fee-lip] /ˈfɪl ɪp;; German ˈfi lɪp/ (Show IPA), (Philipp Schwarzert) 1497–1560, German Protestant reformer.
  • menthaceous — belonging to the Menthaceae, a former name for the plant family Labiatae.
  • mesognathic — having medium, slightly protruding jaws.
  • metachronal — Describing the wavelike beating of a group of cilia.
  • metachrosis — the ability of some animals, such as chameleons, to change their colour
  • metamorphic — pertaining to or characterized by change of form, or metamorphosis.
  • metatrophic — requiring dead organic matter for food.
  • mothercraft — skill and knowledge in looking after children
  • mustachioed — a mustache.
  • myelopathic — any disorder of the spinal cord or of bone marrow.
  • neanthropic — of or relating to modern forms of humans as compared with extinct species of the genus Homo.
  • neuropathic — any diseased condition of the nervous system.
  • nonathletic — physically active and strong; good at athletics or sports: an athletic child.
  • nonattached — not attached or connected, detached
  • nonemphatic — lacking emphasis, not emphatic
  • nonteaching — the act or profession of a person who teaches.
  • octahedrite — anatase.
  • octahedrons — Plural form of octahedron.
  • octahydrate — (chemistry) A hydrate whose solid contains eight molecules of water of crystallization per molecule, or per unit cell.
  • oligochaete — any of various annelids of the family Oligochaeta, including earthworms and certain small, freshwater species, having locomotory setae sunk directly in the body wall.
  • on the case — If you say that someone is on the case, you mean that they are aware of a particular problem and are trying to resolve it.
  • on the coat — in disfavour
  • on the rack — If you say that someone is on the rack, you mean that they are suffering either physically or mentally.
  • ophicalcite — a type of marble containing serpentine and calcite
  • orchestrate — Arrange or score (music) for orchestral performance.
  • orchestrina — (musical instruments) orchestrion.
  • orthoclases — Plural form of orthoclase.
  • orthopaedic — of or relating to orthopedics.
  • osteopathic — Of or pertaining to osteopathy or osteopathic medicine.
  • outreaching — Present participle of outreach.
  • paleolithic — (sometimes lowercase) Anthropology. of, relating to, or characteristic of the cultures of the late Pliocene and the Pleistocene epochs, or early phase of the Stone Age, which appeared first in Africa and are marked by the steady development of stone tools and later antler and bone artifacts, engravings on bone and stone, sculpted figures, and paintings and engravings on the walls of caves and rock-shelters: usually divided into three periods (Lower Paleolithic, c2,000,000–c200,000 b.c., Middle Paleolithic, c150,000–c40,000 b.c., Upper Paleolithic, c40,000–c10,000 b.c.)
  • panchreston — a proposed explanation intended to address a complex problem by trying to account for all possible contingencies but typically proving to be too broadly conceived and therefore oversimplified to be of any practical use.
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