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28-letter words containing h, i, n, t, e

  • the medical research council — a government body that uses public funds to finance research in medicine
  • the obscene publications act — a group of obscenity laws that determines what can be published in Britain
  • the world owes them a living — If you say that someone thinks that the world owes them a living, you are criticizing them because they think it is their right to have a comfortable life without having to make any effort at all.
  • the wrong side of the tracks — the unfashionable or poor district or stratum of a community
  • theophylline ethylenediamine — aminophylline.
  • throw dust in someone's eyes — earth or other matter in fine, dry particles.
  • to be in the interests of sb — to be to the advantage of somebody
  • to be no let-up in something — if there is no let-up in something, usually something unpleasant, there is no reduction in the intensity of it
  • to be on your home territory — to be in a situation in which one is at ease
  • to come to a screeching halt — (of a motor vehicle) to stop suddenly, causing the brakes or tyres to produce a high-pitched sound
  • to cut something to the bone — If something such as costs are cut to the bone, they are reduced to the minimum possible.
  • to handle sb with kid gloves — to treat someone with great tact or caution
  • to have a bee in your bonnet — If you have a bee in your bonnet about something, you are so enthusiastic or worried about it that you keep mentioning it or thinking about it.
  • to have your cake and eat it — If you think that someone wants the benefits of doing two things when it is only reasonable to expect the benefits of doing one, you can say that they want to have their cake and eat it.
  • to know something for a fact — If you say that you know something for a fact, you are emphasizing that you are completely certain that it is true.
  • to play into someone's hands — If you play into someone's hands, you do something which they want you to do and which places you in their power.
  • to set your face against sth — You can say that someone has set their face against something to indicate that they are opposed to it, especially when you want to suggest that they are wrong.
  • to slip through your fingers — If someone or something slips through your fingers, you just fail to catch them, get them, or keep them.
  • to take something lying down — If someone takes an insult or attack lying down, they accept it without protesting.
  • to throw caution to the wind — If you throw caution to the wind, you behave in a way that is not considered sensible or careful.
  • tower technology corporation — A company, established in 1992 by the merger of two OOT companies, with the intention of supplying high performance Eiffel compilation systems. Tower provides development tools, reusable class libraries, and services supporting large scale system development. E-mail: <[email protected]> (orders and inquiries), <[email protected]> (The Eiffel Outlook Journal). Telephone: +1 (512) 452 9455 (8:30 to 5:30 CST business days). Fax: +1 (512) 452 1721. Sales +1 (800) 285-5124 (Free, USA and Canada only). Address: Tower Technology, 1501 W. Koenig Lane, Austin, TX 78756, USA.
  • until sb is blue in the face — If you say that someone can do something until they are blue in the face, you are emphasizing that however much they do it, it will not make any difference.
  • walden, or life in the woods — a book of philosophical observations (1854) by Thoreau.
  • within an inch of one's life — almost to the point of death
  • you can cut sth with a knife — If you have been in a place where there was a very tense atmosphere, you can say that you could have cut the atmosphere with a knife.
  • zeroth law of thermodynamics — the principle that any two systems in thermal equilibrium with a third system are in thermal equilibrium with each other. Compare law of thermodynamics (def 2).
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