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12-letter words containing h, o, u, s, e

  • leiotrichous — Having smooth hair.
  • leisure home — a house for use on weekends, vacations, or the like.
  • lemon squash — lemon soda; a soft drink of lemon juice and soda water.
  • lithospermum — any annual or perennial herbs and small shrubs of the genus lithospermum, of the borage family, native to Europe, N America, and northern Asia, and having white, blue, or yellow flowers
  • little hours — the canonical hours of prime, terce, sext, and nones in the divine office
  • loathfulness — (rare) The condition of being loathful; reluctance.
  • malnourished — poorly or improperly nourished; suffering from malnutrition: thin, malnourished victims of the famine.
  • meetinghouse — A Quaker place of worship.
  • meganthropus — a proposed genus of extinct, late lower Pleistocene primates based on two large lower jaws found in Java, and believed to be either Australopithecine or human.
  • melliphagous — (of an animal) feeding on honey
  • mesognathous — having medium, slightly protruding jaws.
  • mesomorphous — mesomorphic
  • metachronous — Medicine/Medical. occurring at a different time than a similar event: metachronous tumors.
  • metagnathous — Ornithology. having the tips of the mandibles crossed, as the crossbills.
  • metamorphous — metamorphic.
  • misbehaviour — (British) alternative spelling of misbehavior.
  • mischievious — Misconstruction of mischievous.
  • monadelphous — (of stamens) united into one bundle or set by their filaments.
  • monkey flush — three cards of the same suit, usually not in sequence.
  • monkey house — a cage or enclosure in a zoo where monkeys are kept
  • moschiferous — giving off or producing musk
  • mother house — a convent housing a mother superior of a community of nuns.
  • motherhouses — Plural form of motherhouse.
  • moustachioed — Alternative spelling of moustachio\u2019d.
  • mushroomlike — Having the form or characteristics of a mushroom.
  • necrophagous — That eats dead or decaying animal flesh.
  • necrophilous — displaying a preference for dead tissue, esp of certain bacteria and insects
  • necrophorous — denoting animals, such as certain beetles, that carry away the bodies of dead animals
  • neurochemist — A researcher or other professional in the field of neurochemistry.
  • neuropathies — Plural form of neuropathy.
  • neuropathist — a specialist in treating diseases of the nervous system; a neurologist
  • neutrophiles — (of a cell or cell part) having an affinity for neutral dyes.
  • neutrosophic — Neutrosophy
  • neutrosphere — the part of the atmosphere whose constituents are, for the most part, electrically neutral, extending from the earth's surface to the base of the ionosphere.
  • nielsbohrium — dubnium: symbol, Ns: the name originally proposed by Russian scientists for this element
  • noncrushable — (of a container, material, etc) not easily crushed
  • nonscheduled — not scheduled; not entered on or having a schedule; unscheduled: nonscheduled activities.
  • nourishments — Plural form of nourishment.
  • nucleophiles — Plural form of nucleophile.
  • nursing home — a private residential institution equipped to care for persons unable to look after themselves, as the aged or chronically ill.
  • occurs check — (programming)   A feature of some implementations of unification which causes unification of a logic variable V and a structure S to fail if S contains V. Binding a variable to a structure containing that variable results in a cyclic structure which may subsequently cause unification to loop forever. Some implementations use extra pointer comparisons to avoid this. Most implementations of Prolog do not perform the occurs check for reasons of efficiency. Without occurs check the complexity of unification is O(min(size(term1), size(term2))) with occurs check it's O(max(size(term1), size(term2))) In theorem proving unification without the occurs check can lead to unsound inference. For example, in Prolog it is quite valid to write X = f(X). which will succeed, binding X to a cyclic structure. Clearly however, if f is taken to stand for a function rather than a constructor, then the above equality is only valid if f is the identity function. Weijland calls unification without occur check, "complete unification". The reference below describes a complete unification algorithm in terms of Colmerauer's consistency algorithm.
  • ochroleucous — having an off-white colour or a white colour tinted with yellow
  • office hours — hours when a business is open
  • old chestnut — old saying, cliché
  • on the house — a building in which people live; residence for human beings.
  • on the stump — If politicians are on the stump, they are campaigning for an election.
  • orchidaceous — belonging to the plant family Orchidaceae.
  • oreopithecus — a genus of fossil primate from the Miocene coal deposits of Italy, formerly considered to be a possible hominid.
  • orichalceous — relating to or resembling orichalc
  • orthopterous — belonging or pertaining to the Orthoptera, an order of insects, including the cockroaches, mantids, walking sticks, crickets, grasshoppers, and katydids, characterized by leathery forewings, membranous hind wings, and chewing mouthparts.
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