0%

10-letter words containing h, o, r, m, u

  • krummhorns — Plural form of krummhorn.
  • largemouth — Applied to various kinds of fish characterized by a large mouth.
  • lumen-hour — a unit of luminous energy, equal to that emitted in 1 hour by a light source emitting a luminous flux of 1 lumen. Abbreviation: lm-hr.
  • lunchrooms — Plural form of lunchroom.
  • malnourish — Lb transitive To feed insufficiently, to cause malnutrition.
  • moa hunter — the name given by anthropologists to the early Māori inhabitants of New Zealand
  • morgenthauHenry, 1856–1946, U.S. financier and diplomat, born in Germany.
  • motormouth — a person who is a constant or irrepressible talker.
  • moucharaby — a projecting second-storey window or balcony enclosed with latticework
  • mouth harp — harmonica (def 1).
  • mouthguard — A device that fits into the mouth over one or both arches of teeth, which is usually made of plastic. They may be used to protect aginst injury during sport or fighting, or may serve a medical purpose.
  • mouthparts — Plural form of mouthpart.
  • murtherous — (archaic) Intending, or likely to commit murder; bloodthirsty or homicidal.
  • mushroomed — Simple past tense and past participle of mushroom.
  • mushroomer — a person who picks mushrooms
  • neurohumor — neurotransmitter
  • nonharmful — Not harmful.
  • orichalcum — a brass rich in zinc, prepared by the ancients.
  • outmarched — Simple past tense and past participle of outmarch.
  • photomural — a wall decoration consisting of a very large photograph or photographs.
  • poor mouth — unjustified complaining, esp to excite sympathy
  • poor-mouth — to lament or argue that one is too poor; plead poverty.
  • portsmouth — a seaport in S Hampshire, in S England, on the English Channel: chief British naval station.
  • prometheus — a Titan, the father of Deucalion and brother of Atlas and Epimetheus, who taught humankind various arts and was sometimes said to have shaped humans out of clay and endowed them with the spark of life. For having stolen fire from Olympus and given it to humankind in defiance of Zeus, he was chained to a rock where an eagle daily tore at his liver, until he was finally released by Hercules.
  • promethium — a rare-earth, metallic, trivalent element. Symbol: Pm; atomic number: 61.
  • protohuman — of, relating to, or resembling extinct hominid populations that had some but not all the features of modern Homo sapiens.
  • push broom — a wide broom with a long handle, pushed by hand and used for sweeping large areas.
  • rheumatoid — resembling rheumatism.
  • rochambeau — Jean Baptiste Donatien de Vimeur [zhahn ba-teest daw-na-syan duh vee-mœr] /ʒɑ̃ baˈtist dɔ naˈsyɛ̃ də viˈmœr/ (Show IPA), Count de, 1725–1807, French general: marshal of France 1791–1807; commander of the French army in the American Revolution.
  • roche alum — an alumlike substance derived from alunite.
  • routemarch — march in which a unit retains its column formation but individuals are allowed to break step.
  • scaramouch — a stock character in commedia dell'arte and farce who is a cowardly braggart, easily beaten and frightened.
  • semichorus — half of a chorus; part of a chorus to be sung by a portion but not all of the singers
  • shrewmouse — a shrew.
  • skeuomorph — an ornament or design on an object copied from a form of the object when made from another material or by other techniques, as an imitation metal rivet mark found on handles of prehistoric pottery.
  • smartmouth — a witty or sarcastic person
  • supermacho — extremely macho
  • tauromachy — the art or technique of bullfighting.
  • umber moth — any of various brownish geometrid moths, esp the waved umber (Menophra abruptaria) and small waved umber (Horisme vitalbata), that are cryptically marked to merge with tree bark, and the mottled umber (Erannis defoliaria) whose looper larvae can strip branches and even trees
  • unharmonic — pertaining to harmony, as distinguished from melody and rhythm.
  • unhumorous — without humour
  • unmotherly — not motherly
  • woman-hour — a woman honored by a group.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?