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11-letter words containing h, i, l, t, s

  • mesothelium — epithelium of mesodermal origin, which lines the body cavities.
  • met-english — A Fortran-like language designed at Metropolitan Life in the early 1960s. It had support for variable-length bit fields. Most MetLife DP in the 1960s and 1970s was in Met-English. It was originally developed for Honeywell machines, but many programs still run under IBM MVS via a Honeywell emulator.
  • metalsmiths — Plural form of metalsmith.
  • microlights — Plural form of microlight.
  • millwrights — Plural form of millwright.
  • mirthlessly — In a mirthless manner; sadly.
  • misch metal — a pyrophoric alloy, containing approximately 50 percent cerium and 45 percent lanthanum, made from a mixture of various rare-earth chlorides by electrolysis.
  • monolithism — an obelisk, column, large statue, etc., formed of a single block of stone.
  • moustachial — (of a stripe on a beak or snout of an animal) resembling a moustache
  • multiphasic — having many phases, stages, aspects, or the like.
  • multischeme — An implementation of Multilisp built on MIT's C-Scheme, for the BBN Butterfly.
  • multitheism — The existence of multiple forms of theism, as in a society.
  • multitheist — Of or pertaining to multitheism.
  • mythologies — Plural form of mythology.
  • mythologise — to classify, explain, or write about myths.
  • mythologist — an expert in mythology.
  • nemophilist — (rare) One who is fond of forests or forest scenery; a haunter of the woods.
  • nephroliths — a renal calculus; kidney stone.
  • netherlings — underwear
  • neutrophils — Plural form of neutrophil.
  • nightlights — Plural form of nightlight.
  • non-hostile — of, relating to, or characteristic of an enemy: a hostile nation.
  • nonhospital — not related to, identified with, or taking place in a hospital
  • northerlies — Plural form of northerly.
  • notaphilist — a person who studies or collects paper money
  • novelettish — Resembling or characteristic of a novelette.
  • oenophilist — a person who enjoys wines, usually as a connoisseur.
  • old british — Brythonic as used before a.d. 800.
  • ophiologist — the branch of herpetology dealing with snakes.
  • ophthalmist — an eye expert; an oculist
  • ostrichlike — a large, two-toed, swift-footed flightless bird, Struthio camelus, indigenous to Africa and Arabia, domesticated for its plumage: the largest of living birds.
  • otherwhiles — at other times, sometimes
  • overhastily — in such a way as to be excessively hasty or done without enough consideration
  • pathologies — the science or the study of the origin, nature, and course of diseases.
  • pathologist — the science or the study of the origin, nature, and course of diseases.
  • peristalith — a group of stones encircling a mound, dolmen, or the like.
  • philatelist — the collecting of stamps and other postal matter as a hobby or an investment.
  • philistines — (sometimes initial capital letter) a person who is lacking in or hostile or smugly indifferent to cultural values, intellectual pursuits, aesthetic refinement, etc., or is contentedly commonplace in ideas and tastes.
  • phillipsite — a zeolite mineral, similar to stilbite but with potassium replacing some of the calcium.
  • philoctetes — Classical Mythology. a noted archer and squire of Hercules. Bitten by a snake and abandoned on an island because of his festering wound, he was at length brought by the Greeks to Troy, where he recovered and later killed Paris.
  • philologist — the study of literary texts and of written records, the establishment of their authenticity and their original form, and the determination of their meaning.
  • phitsanulok — a city in central Thailand.
  • phonologist — a specialist in phonology.
  • phycologist — the branch of botany dealing with algae.
  • phyllotaxis — phyllotaxy.
  • physicalist — a doctrine associated with logical positivism and holding that every meaningful statement, other than the necessary statements of logic and mathematics, must refer directly or indirectly to observable properties of spatiotemporal things or events.
  • physicality — the physical attributes of a person, especially when overdeveloped or overemphasized.
  • physiolater — somebody who worships nature
  • physiolatry — the worship of nature
  • pilot house — an enclosed structure on the deck of a ship from which it can be navigated.
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