0%

10-letter words containing h, y, a

  • ethnically — Of, pertaining to ethnicity or ethnics.
  • ethylamine — a colourless compound with an ammonia-like odour
  • ethylation — (organic chemistry) Any reaction that introduces an ethyl group into a molecule.
  • eurybathic — (of an aquatic organism) able to live at different depths
  • euryhaline — (of certain aquatic animals) able to tolerate a wide range of salinity
  • eye shadow — make-up for the eyelids
  • eyecatcher — Something that catches the eye.
  • eyepatches — Plural form of eyepatch.
  • faithfully — strict or thorough in the performance of duty: a faithful worker.
  • falkenhayn — Erich von [ey-rikh fuh n] /ˈeɪ rɪx fən/ (Show IPA), 1861–1922, German general of World War I.
  • flight pay — a pay supplement allowed by the U.S. Air Force to certain crew members who attain a minimum flight time per month.
  • flycatcher — any of numerous Old World birds of the family Muscicapidae, that feed on insects captured in the air.
  • forsythias — Plural form of forsythia.
  • freakishly — queer; odd; unusual; grotesque: a freakish appearance.
  • french way — cunnilingus or fellatio.
  • galsworthyJohn, 1867–1933, English novelist and dramatist: Nobel Prize 1932.
  • gammopathy — a disorder of the immune system characterized by abnormally increased levels of immunoglobulins in the blood.
  • gargoylish — Of, pertaining to, or resembling a gargoyle.
  • gayfeather — Many of the plant of the genus Liatris, native to North America, including Mexico, east of the continental divide.
  • ghastfully — in a ghastful manner
  • glyphosate — a compound, C 3 H 8 NO 5 P, used to kill a wide range of weeds.
  • go haywire — to behave or perform erratically
  • gothically — In a gothic way.
  • gramophony — the art, technique, or practice of recording sound on disc
  • granophyre — a fine-grained or porphyritic granitic rock with a micrographic intergrowth of the minerals of the groundmass.
  • graphalloy — a compound of graphite impregnated with Babbitt metal, bronze, copper, gold, etc., used as a low-friction material.
  • graphicacy — the ability to understand and use maps, plans, symbols, etc
  • graphology — the study of handwriting, especially when regarded as an expression of the writer's character, personality, abilities, etc.
  • gray birch — a small, bushy birch, Betula populifolia, of stony or sandy areas of the eastern U.S., having grayish-white bark and triangular leaves.
  • gray whale — a grayish-black whalebone whale, Eschrichtius robustus, of the North Pacific, growing to a length of 50 feet (15.2 meters): now rare.
  • graywether — sarsen.
  • grey whale — a large N Pacific whalebone whale, Eschrichtius glaucus, that is grey or black with white spots and patches: family Eschrichtidae
  • greyheaded — having grey hair
  • gynarchies — Plural form of gynarchy.
  • gynephobia — an abnormal fear of women.
  • gynophobia — Extreme or irrational fear of women or of the female.
  • gypsophila — any plant belonging to the genus Gypsophila, of the pink family, native to Mediterranean regions, having small, panicled, pink or white flowers, as baby's breath.
  • habilatory — relating to clothes or dressed in clothes
  • habitually — of the nature of a habit; fixed by or resulting from habit: habitual courtesy.
  • hackeysack — A non-competition sport in which a small sack, or
  • hackle fly — an artificial fly made with hackles, usually without wings.
  • hackneying — Present participle of hackney.
  • hackneyman — a man who rents out carriages and horses
  • hacky sack — (lowercase) a game in which a footbag is juggled with the feet.
  • haemolymph — the blood-like fluid of invertebrates
  • haemolyses — Plural form of haemolysis.
  • haemolysin — Alternative spelling of hemolysin.
  • haemolysis — Alternative spelling of hemolysis.
  • haemolytic — of or relating to the disintegration of red blood cells
  • hagiocracy — government by a body of persons esteemed as holy.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?