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12-letter words containing h, g, e

  • grapple shot — a grapnellike projectile fired from a gun and used as a hold for the end of a line in rescue operations or in kedging.
  • grass hockey — field hockey.
  • grass shears — large scissors for cutting grass
  • grasshoppers — Plural form of grasshopper.
  • gravenhages' — a Dutch name of The Hague.
  • gray panther — a member of an organized group of elderly people seeking to secure or protect their rights by collective action.
  • great schism — a period of division in the Roman Catholic Church, 1378–1417, over papal succession, during which there were two, or sometimes three, claimants to the papal office.
  • great-nephew — a son of one's nephew or niece; grandnephew.
  • greater than — (character)   ">" ASCII character 62. Common names: ITU-T: greater than; ket ("<" = bra); right angle; right angle bracket; right broket. Rare: into, toward; write to; blow ("<" = suck); gozinta; out; zap (all from Unix I/O redirection); INTERCAL: right angle. See also less than.
  • greathearted — having or showing a generous heart; magnanimous.
  • greek church — Greek Orthodox Church (def 1).
  • greenfinches — Plural form of greenfinch.
  • greenishness — The quality of being greenish.
  • greenlighted — to give permission to proceed; authorize: The renovation project was green-lighted by the board of directors.
  • greenwashing — Present participle of greenwash.
  • grey panther — a member of the generation of affluent older consumers, who regard themselves as young, active, and sociable
  • gross weight — total weight without deduction for tare, tret, or waste.
  • groundsheets — Plural form of groundsheet.
  • group theory — the branch of mathematics that deals with the structure of mathematical groups and mappings between them.
  • growth curve — a curve on a graph in which a variable is plotted against time to illustrate the growth of the variable
  • grudge match — You can call a contest between two people or groups a grudge match when they dislike each other.
  • guanethidine — a potent adrenergic neuron blocking agent, C 10 H 22 N 4 , used in the treatment of hypertension.
  • gully-washer — a usually short, heavy rainstorm.
  • gullywashers — Plural form of gullywasher.
  • gustav hertz — Gustav [goo s-tahf] /ˈgʊs tɑf/ (Show IPA), 1887–1975, German physicist: Nobel Prize 1925.
  • gutta-percha — the milky juice, nearly white when pure, of various Malaysian trees of the sapodilla family, especially Palaquium gutta.
  • gutwrenching — Alternative spelling of gut-wrenching.
  • gynantherous — having the stamens converted into pistils by the action of frost, disease, or insects.
  • h paul grice — H(erbert) Paul, 1913–88, English philosopher.
  • haemogenesis — Haematopoiesis.
  • haemorrhages — Plural form of haemorrhage.
  • haemorrhagic — (chiefly, British) alternative spelling of hemorrhagic.
  • hagiocracies — Plural form of hagiocracy.
  • hagiographer — one of the writers of the Hagiographa.
  • hair-trigger — easily activated or set off; reacting immediately to the slightest provocation or cause: a hair-trigger temper.
  • hairdressing — the act or process of cutting, combing out, doing up, or styling hair.
  • half-english — of, relating to, or characteristic of England or its inhabitants, institutions, etc.
  • half-glasses — a pair of eyeglasses, often shaped like the lower half of regular eyeglasses, containing lenses to aid in reading and not suitable for distance vision.
  • hallucinogen — a substance that produces hallucinations.
  • halogen lamp — a gas-filled, high-intensity incandescent lamp having a tungsten filament and containing a small amount of a halogen, such as iodine, that vaporizes on heating and redeposits any evaporated tungsten particles back onto the filament: used especially in motion-picture projectors and automobile headlights.
  • halogenating — Present participle of halogenate.
  • halogenation — (chemistry) The reaction of a halogen with something, especially the replacement of a hydrogen atom of an organic compound with a halogen one.
  • hamming code — (algorithm)   Extra, redundant bits added to stored or transmitted data for the purposes of error detection and correction. Named after the mathematician Richard Hamming, Hamming codes greatly improve the reliability of data, e.g. from distant space probes, where it is impractical, because of the long transmission delay, to correct errors by requesting retransmission.
  • hand baggage — the suitcases, bags, etc, that you take with you onto an aeroplane when you travel, as opposed to those bags that are put in the aeroplane's hold
  • hand grenade — a grenade or explosive shell that is thrown by hand and exploded either by impact or by means of a fuze.
  • hand luggage — carry-on baggage
  • hand setting — Also called French telephone. a telephone having a mouthpiece and earpiece mounted at opposite ends of a handle.
  • hand-grenade — a grenade or explosive shell that is thrown by hand and exploded either by impact or by means of a fuze.
  • hand-selling — a gift or token for good luck or as an expression of good wishes, as at the beginning of the new year or when entering upon a new situation or enterprise.
  • hanging step — a step projecting from a wall with no real or apparent support at its outer end.
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