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10-letter words containing h, o, e, t, a

  • orchestral — of, relating to, or resembling an orchestra.
  • orchestras — Plural form of orchestra.
  • ore hearth — a small blast furnace for smelting lead.
  • orthocaine — a methyl ester used for local anaesthesia
  • orthoclase — a common white or pink mineral of the feldspar group, KAlSi 3 O 8 , having two good cleavages at right angles, and found in silica-rich igneous rocks: used in the manufacture of porcelain.
  • orthograde — walking in an upright manner
  • orthopnoea — difficult or painful breathing except in an erect sitting or standing position.
  • orthoptera — Any of very many four-winged insects, of the order Orthoptera, such as grasshoppers, crickets and locusts.
  • orthorexia — (psychology) A fixation with healthy or righteous eating.
  • osteopathy — a therapeutic system originally based upon the premise that manipulation of the muscles and bones to promote structural integrity could restore or preserve health: current osteopathic physicians use the diagnostic and therapeutic techniques of conventional medicine as well as manipulative measures.
  • other half — the people of an economic class clearly different from one's own or from that to which reference is being made: a glimpse of how the other half lives.
  • other than — additional or further: he and one other person.
  • othergates — different or other
  • our father — Lord's Prayer.
  • outachieve — (transitive) To surpass in achievement; to achieve more than.
  • outbreathe — to breathe out
  • outmarched — Simple past tense and past participle of outmarch.
  • outmatched — to be superior to; surpass; outdo: The home team seems to have been completely outmatched by the visitors.
  • outmatches — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outmatch.
  • outreached — Simple past tense and past participle of outreach.
  • outreaches — Plural form of outreach.
  • overheated — Someone who is overheated is very angry about something.
  • overtaught — taught to excess
  • overthwart — to lie across
  • palaeolith — a stone tool dating to the Palaeolithic
  • pantheonic — a domed circular temple at Rome, erected a.d. 120–124 by Hadrian, used as a church since a.d.
  • pantothere — any animal of the extinct order Pantotheria that lived during the late Mesozoic Era, believed to be the ancestor of the marsupial and placental mammals.
  • parenthood — the state, position, or relation of a parent.
  • parthenope — a siren, who drowned herself when Odysseus evaded the lure of the sirens' singing. Her body was said to have been cast ashore at what became Naples
  • patchcocke — a clown
  • pathet lao — the Communist nationalist group that took over the government of Laos in 1975 after two decades of civil war.
  • pathogenic — Pathology. capable of producing disease: pathogenic bacteria.
  • peashooter — a tube through which dried peas, beans, or small pellets are blown, used as a toy.
  • pentachord — a series of five consecutive notes of a scale
  • pentathlon — an athletic contest comprising five different track and field events and won by the contestant gaining the highest total score.
  • petrograph — petroglyph.
  • petrolhead — a person who is excessively interested in or is devoted to travelling by car
  • phenolated — containing phenol; carbolated.
  • phenoplast — phenolic resin.
  • phonematic — phonemic.
  • phonetical — Also, phonetical. of or relating to speech sounds, their production, or their transcription in written symbols.
  • photophase — a phase of light in a cycle of light and dark
  • plate shop — a shop for cold-forming metal plates.
  • ploughgate — a measurement of ploughable land
  • polychaete — any annelid of the class Polychaeta, having unsegmented swimming appendages with many setae or bristles.
  • polyhalite — a type or pink or red mineral
  • poppethead — a tailstock or headstock of a lathe.
  • post-haste — with the greatest possible speed or promptness: to come to a friend's aid posthaste.
  • promethean — of or suggestive of Prometheus.
  • rawsthorne — Alan. 1905–71, English composer, whose works include three symphonies, several concertos, and a set of Symphonic Studies (1939)
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