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12-letter words containing h, e, m, o, r

  • haemorrhagic — (chiefly, British) alternative spelling of hemorrhagic.
  • haemorrhoids — Plural form of haemorrhoid.
  • haemosiderin — Alternative form of hemosiderin.
  • hair removal — depilatory treatment
  • hair remover — depilatory cream
  • hall bedroom — a small bedroom off a corridor, esp. a small bedroom formed by partitioning off the end of an upstairs corridor
  • hammer throw — a field event in which the hammer is thrown for distance.
  • harbormaster — A harbormaster is the official in charge of a harbor.
  • hard-mouthed — of or relating to a horse not sensitive to the pressure of a bit.
  • harmonizable — That can be harmonized.
  • harmonometer — the equipment used for measuring the harmonic relations of sounds
  • harvest home — the bringing home of the harvest.
  • harvest moon — the moon at and about the period of fullness that is nearest to the autumnal equinox.
  • headforemost — headfirst (def 1).
  • heavy bomber — a large plane capable of carrying heavy bomb loads for long distances, especially at high altitudes.
  • heliotropism — heliotropic tendency or growth.
  • helmspersons — Plural form of helmsperson.
  • hemarthrosis — (pathology) bleeding in the joints.
  • hemerocallis — the genus comprising the day lilies.
  • hemichordate — belonging or pertaining to the chordates of the phylum Hemichordata, comprising small, widely distributed, marine animals, as the acorn worms.
  • hemimorphism — The condition of being hemimorphic.
  • hemimorphite — a hydrous zinc silicate mineral, Zn 4 (OH) 2 Si 2 O 7 ⋅H 2 O, occurring in clear, colorless orthorhombic crystals; calamine: an ore of zinc.
  • hemispheroid — half of a spheroid.
  • hemodialyzer — artificial kidney.
  • hemorheology — The science of the rheological (especially flow) properties of the blood.
  • hemorrhaging — a profuse discharge of blood, as from a ruptured blood vessel; bleeding.
  • hemorrhoidal — Usually, hemorrhoids. Pathology. an abnormally enlarged vein mainly due to a persistent increase in venous pressure, occurring inside the anal sphincter of the rectum and beneath the mucous membrane (internal hemorrhoid) or outside the anal sphincter and beneath the surface of the anal skin (external hemorrhoid)
  • heroic drama — Restoration tragedy, especially that popular in England c1660–1700, using highly rhetorical language and written in heroic couplets.
  • heroicomical — blending heroic and comic elements: a heroicomic poem.
  • herstmonceux — a village in S England, in E Sussex north of Eastbourne: 15th-century castle, site of the Royal Observatory, which was transferred from Greenwich between 1948 and 1958, until 1990
  • heterochrome — heterochromatic.
  • heterogamete — either of a pair of conjugating gametes differing in form, size, structure, or sex.
  • heterogamety — the condition or state of being heterogametic
  • heterogamous — Genetics. having unlike gametes, or reproducing by the union of such gametes (opposed to isogamous).
  • heteromerous — having or consisting of parts that differ in quality, number of elements, or the like: a heteromerous flower.
  • heteromorphy — (biology) The state or quality of being heteromorphic; heteromorphism.
  • heteronomous — subject to or involving different laws.
  • heteronymous — of, relating to, or characteristic of a heteronym.
  • heterosexism — a prejudiced attitude or discriminatory practices against homosexuals by heterosexuals.
  • heterotherms — Plural form of heterotherm.
  • heterothermy — The possession of characteristics of both poikilothermy and homeothermy.
  • hierogrammat — a writer of hierograms.
  • high polymer — a polymer composed of a large number of monomers.
  • hindforemost — with the back part in the front place
  • hire company — a company that hires things out to people
  • hobby farmer — a person who runs a farm as a hobby rather than a means of making a living
  • holidaymaker — vacationer.
  • home address — the address of one's house or flat
  • home and dry — If you say that someone is, in British English home and dry, or in American English home free, you mean that they have been successful or that they are certain to be successful.
  • home country — the country a person comes from
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