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10-letter words containing h, g, e

  • skylighted — having or illuminated by a skylight.
  • slathering — to spread or apply thickly: to slather butter on toast.
  • slaughtery — a slaughterhouse
  • sleigh bed — a bed resembling a sleigh in shape, with curved boards at the head and foot
  • slithering — to slide down or along a surface, especially unsteadily, from side to side, or with some friction or noise: The box slithered down the chute.
  • smoketight — (of a door, etc) not allowing smoke to pass through
  • smothering — to stifle or suffocate, as by smoke or other means of preventing free breathing.
  • somethings — Informal. a person or thing of some value or consequence: He is really something! This writer has something to say and she says it well.
  • song sheet — A song sheet is a piece of paper with the words to one or more songs printed on it. Song sheets are given to groups of people at occasions when they are expected to sing together.
  • south gate — a city in SW California, near Los Angeles.
  • sphenogram — a cuneiform character.
  • spreaghery — the activity or crime of raiding cattle
  • springhare — a leaping and burrowing rodent, Pedetes capensis, native to southern Africa, having kangaroolike legs and long, pointed ears.
  • springhead — a spring or fountainhead from which a stream flows.
  • squelching — to strike or press with crushing force; crush down; squash.
  • stagecoach — a horse-drawn coach that formerly traveled regularly over a fixed route with passengers, parcels, etc.
  • steamtight — impervious to steam.
  • stenograph — any of various keyboard instruments, somewhat resembling a typewriter, used for writing in shorthand, as by means of phonetic or arbitrary symbols.
  • stonehenge — a prehistoric monument on Salisbury Plain, Wiltshire, England, consisting of a large circle of megaliths surrounding a smaller circle and four massive trilithons; dating to late Neolithic and early Bronze Age times (c1700–1200 b.c.) and believed to have been connected with a sun cult or used for astronomical observations.
  • straighten — make straight
  • straighter — without a bend, angle, or curve; not curved; direct: a straight path.
  • strengthen — to make stronger; give strength to.
  • stretching — the activity of straightening the arms and legs and tightening the muscles
  • subheading — a subordinate division of a title or heading.
  • sugarhouse — a shed or other building where maple syrup or maple sugar is made.
  • superlight — extremely light
  • supertight — extremely tight
  • sure thing — something that is or is supposed to be a certain success, as a bet or a business venture: He thinks that real estate is a sure thing.
  • switchgear — switching equipment used in an electric power station.
  • teacherage — a building serving as a combination school and living quarters, as on certain government reservations and in remote, sparsely settled areas.
  • technology — the branch of knowledge that deals with the creation and use of technical means and their interrelation with life, society, and the environment, drawing upon such subjects as industrial arts, engineering, applied science, and pure science.
  • teethridge — alveolar ridge.
  • tegakwitha — Tekakwitha
  • telegraphy — the art or practice of constructing or operating telegraphs.
  • telpherage — a transportation system in which cars or other carriers are suspended from or run on wire cables or the like, especially one operated by electricity.
  • the budget — an estimate of British government expenditures and revenues and the financial plans for the ensuing fiscal year presented annually to the House of Commons by the Chancellor of the Exchequer
  • the change — menopause
  • the deluge — the great flood in Noah's time: Gen. 7
  • the dergue — the socialist ruling body of Ethiopia, established in 1974
  • the dragon — the constellation Draco
  • the galaxy — the spiral galaxy, approximately 100 000 light years in diameter, that contains the solar system about three fifths of the distance from its centre
  • the grades — elementary school
  • the grange — an association of farmers that strongly influenced state legislatures in the late 19th century
  • the guides — an organization for girls equivalent to the Scouts
  • the gutter — a poverty-stricken, degraded, or criminal environment
  • the living — those that are still alive
  • the ogaden — a region of SE Ethiopia, bordering on Somalia: consists of a desert plateau, inhabited by Somali nomads; a secessionist movement, supported by Somalia, has existed within the region since the early 1960s and led to bitter fighting between Ethiopia and Somalia (1977–78)
  • the plough — the group of the seven brightest stars in the constellation Ursa Major
  • the virgin — the constellation Virgo, the sixth sign of the zodiac
  • the-grange — a campaign for state control of railroads and grain elevators, especially in the north central states, carried on during the 1870s by members of the Patrons of Husbandry (the Grange) a farmers' organization that had been formed for social and cultural purposes.
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