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10-letter words containing h, e, m, i, a

  • enthusiasm — Intense and eager enjoyment, interest, or approval.
  • ephraimite — a member of the tribe of Ephraim
  • epiphonema — an exclamation that concludes a discourse
  • epithermal — relating to minerals formed from warm, shallow water
  • erímanthos — a mountain in SW Greece, in the NW Peloponnese. Height: 2224 m (7297 ft)
  • ethylamine — a colourless compound with an ammonia-like odour
  • euharmonic — producing perfect concord or harmony
  • exhumation — The act of digging up that which has been buried.
  • famishment — Starvation; the fact or process of being famished.
  • fauxhemian — Someone who adopts some aspects of a Bohemian lifestyle while staying within social conventions.
  • frameshift — the addition or deletion of one or more nucleotides in a strand of DNA, which shifts the codon triplets of the genetic code of messenger RNA and causes a misreading during translation, resulting in an aberrant protein and therefore a mutation.
  • freshmanic — of, relating to, or characteristic of a freshman: freshmanic enthusiasm.
  • game chips — round thin potato chips served with game
  • graphemics — the study of writing systems and of their relation to speech.
  • habiliment — Usually, habiliments. clothes or clothing. clothes as worn in a particular profession, way of life, etc.
  • haematinic — Alternative form of hematinic.
  • haematosis — Alternative form of hematosis.
  • haematuria — Alternative spelling of hematuria.
  • haemoconia — the small particles of matter, thought to be particles of the structure of red blood cells, that are present in blood that is flowing around the body
  • haemolysin — Alternative spelling of hemolysin.
  • haemolysis — Alternative spelling of hemolysis.
  • haemolytic — of or relating to the disintegration of red blood cells
  • haemophile — a haemophilic bacterium
  • haemotoxic — destructive to red blood cells
  • haemotoxin — a substance that destroys red blood cells
  • hair cream — a cosmetic preparation used to improve the condition of, and/or to style the hair
  • half-miler — a half-mile race.
  • half-smile — a smile that is uncertain or short-lived
  • ham-fisted — clumsy, inept, or heavy-handed: a ham-handed approach to dealing with people that hurts a lot of feelings.
  • hammerings — a series of punishments or beatings
  • handmaiden — something that is necessarily subservient or subordinate to another: Ceremony is but the handmaid of worship.
  • hard times — a period of difficulties or hardship.
  • harmonised — Simple past tense and past participle of harmonise.
  • harmoniser — (British spelling) alternative spelling of harmonizer.
  • harmonises — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of harmonise.
  • harmonized — Add notes to (a melody) to produce harmony.
  • harmonizer — to bring into harmony, accord, or agreement: to harmonize one's views with the new situation.
  • harmonizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of harmonize.
  • hate crime — a crime, usually violent, motivated by prejudice or intolerance toward an individual’s national origin, ethnicity, color, religion, gender, gender identity, sexual orientation, or disability.
  • heathenism — a belief or practice of heathens; idolatry.
  • hegemonial — hegemonic, controlling, dominant
  • heidenstam — Verner von [ver-nuh r fawn] /ˈvɛr nər fɔn/ (Show IPA), 1859–1940, Swedish poet and novelist: Nobel Prize 1916.
  • hemangioma — See under angioma.
  • hematocrit — a centrifuge for separating the cells of the blood from the plasma.
  • hematoidin — ErrorTitleDiv {.
  • hemiacetal — any of the class of organic chemical compounds having the general formula RCH(OH)OR, where R is an organic group.
  • hemianopia — any of several conditions in which there is blindness in half of the visual field, involving one or both eyes.
  • hemianopic — having or relating to hemianopia
  • hemicrania — pain in one side of the head.
  • hemihedral — (of a crystal) having only half the planes or faces required by the maximum symmetry of the system to which it belongs.
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