0%

11-letter words containing h, o, a, r, u

  • kongur shan — a mountain in China, in W Xinjiang: the highest peak in the Pamirs. Height: 7719 m (25 325 ft)
  • laughworthy — worthy of being laughed at
  • lazar house — (formerly) a hospital for persons with infectious diseases, esp leprosy
  • leucorrhoea — a white or yellowish discharge of mucous material from the vagina, often an indication of infection
  • leukorrheal — Relating to leukorrhea.
  • loud-hailer — a portable loudspeaker having a built-in amplifier and microphone
  • loudhailers — Plural form of loudhailer.
  • lunar month — month (def 5).
  • lunar-month — Also called calendar month. any of the twelve parts, as January or February, into which the calendar year is divided.
  • lythraceous — belonging to the Lythraceae, the loosestrife family of plants.
  • macrophylum — a group of languages that are of a higher order than a phylum
  • manor house — the house of the lord of a manor.
  • marlboroughJohn Churchill, 1st Duke of, Churchill, John, 1st Duke of Marlborough.
  • maryborough — a seaport in E Australia.
  • mouth guard — protective shield for teeth
  • mouth organ — harmonica (def 1).
  • multiauthor — having numerous or many authors
  • museography — The systematic description of objects in museums.
  • naturopaths — Plural form of naturopath.
  • naturopathy — a system or method of treating disease that employs no surgery or synthetic drugs but uses special diets, herbs, vitamins, massage, etc., to assist the natural healing processes.
  • neuropathic — any diseased condition of the nervous system.
  • northumbria — an early English kingdom extending N from the Humber to the Firth of Forth.
  • noun phrase — a construction that functions syntactically as a noun, consisting of a noun and any modifiers, as all the men in the room who are reading books, or of a noun substitute, as a pronoun.
  • nourishable — able to be nourished; benefiting from nourishment
  • onslaughter — An onslaught.
  • opera house — a theater devoted chiefly to operas.
  • ophidiarium — an enclosure for snakes, adapted to their normal living conditions
  • ornithosaur — an extinct flying reptile
  • orphan drug — Pharmacology. a drug that remains undeveloped or untested or is otherwise neglected because of limited potential for commercial gain.
  • outreaching — Present participle of outreach.
  • overdraught — (chiefly, British) An overdraft.
  • overfraught — too fraught
  • passthrough — a windowlike opening, as one for passing food or dishes between a kitchen and a dining area.
  • ploughshare — the horizontal pointed cutting blade of a mouldboard plough
  • pneumograph — a device for recording graphically the respiratory movements of the thorax.
  • port arthur — a port in W Ontario, in S Canada, on Lake Superior: created in 1970 by the merger of twin cities (Fort William and Port Arthur) and two adjoining townships.
  • pouched rat — pocket gopher.
  • prognathous — having protrusive jaws; having a gnathic index over 103.
  • prothallium — Botany. the gametophyte of ferns and related plants.
  • prudhoe bay — an inlet of the Beaufort Sea, N of Alaska: large oil and gas fields.
  • pseudograph — a piece of writing that is falsely ascribed
  • pulmobranch — a respiratory organ found in some invertebrates
  • push around — to press upon or against (a thing) with force in order to move it away.
  • pyrrhuloxia — a cardinallike grosbeak, Cardinalis (Pyrrhuloxia) sinuatus, of the southwestern U.S. and Mexico, having a bill superficially resembling that of a parrot.
  • quadraphony — high-fidelity sound reproduction involving signals transmitted through four different channels.
  • ramgunshoch — surly; bad-tempered; rude
  • ranch house — the house of the owner of a ranch, usually of one story and with a low-pitched roof.
  • readthrough — reading (def 1).
  • reauthorize — to give authority or official power to; empower: to authorize an employee to sign purchase orders.
  • reproachful — full of or expressing reproach or censure: a reproachful look.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?