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

  • touchpaper — paper saturated with potassium nitrate to make it burn slowly, used for igniting explosives and fireworks.
  • tow-haired — having blond and sometimes tousled hair
  • tracheolar — of or relating to the tracheole
  • track shoe — a light, heelless, usually leather shoe having either steel spikes for use outdoors on a cinder or dirt track, or a rubber sole for use indoors on a board floor.
  • trade show — show (def 22).
  • trap house — a shelter from which the clay pigeons are released in trapshooting.
  • trochanter — Anatomy. either of two knobs at the top of the femur, the greater on the outside and the lesser on the inside, serving for the attachment of muscles between the thigh and pelvis.
  • trophesial — involving or relating to trophesy
  • two shakes — to move or sway with short, quick, irregular vibratory movements.
  • two-handed — having two hands.
  • two-hander — a play for two actors
  • typhaceous — belonging to the family of flowering plants Typhaceae
  • typothetae — printers collectively; used in the names of organized associations, as of master printers
  • under oath — having sworn to tell the truth
  • unfathomed — a unit of length equal to six feet (1.8 meters): used chiefly in nautical measurements. Abbreviation: fath.
  • vectograph — a technology that uses special glasses to see a photographic image between two plastic sheets as three dimensional
  • waiterhood — the state of being a waiter
  • washed out — capable of being washed without shrinking, fading, etc.; washable: a wash dress.
  • washed-out — faded, especially from washing.
  • watch over — to be alertly on the lookout, look attentively, or observe, as to see what comes, is done, or happens: to watch while an experiment is performed.
  • watchtower — a tower on which a sentinel keeps watch.
  • watchwomen — Plural form of watchwoman.
  • water hole — a depression in the surface of the ground, containing water.
  • waterhouse — Alfred. 1830–1905, British architect; a leader of the Gothic Revival. His buildings include Manchester Town Hall (1868) and the Natural History Museum, London (1881)
  • whaleboats — Plural form of whaleboat.
  • what goes? — what's happening?
  • whatsoever — At all (used for emphasis).
  • wheat pool — (in Western Canada) a cereal farmers' cooperative
  • wheatstoneSir Charles, 1802–75, English physicist and inventor.
  • wheatworms — Plural form of wheatworm.
  • whereabout — whereabouts.
  • white coal — Informal. water, as of a stream, used for power.
  • white coat — a white coat worn over everyday clothes by a doctor in a hospital or a scientist
  • whiteboard — a smooth, glossy sheet of white plastic that can be written on with a colored pen or marker in the manner of a blackboard.
  • whitecoats — Plural form of whitecoat.
  • wholewheat — Denoting flour or bread made from whole grains of wheat, including the husk or outer layer.
  • woolgather — to engage in woolgathering.
  • yottahertz — one septillion (10 24) hertz. Abbreviation: YHz.
  • youthquake — (informal) A noticeable shift in society or culture in response to the activities or tastes of younger members of the culture.
  • zoothecial — of or relating to the zoothecia
  • zootherapy — the use of therapeutic drugs derived from animals
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