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10-letter words containing h, y, b

  • hybrid tea — a type of cultivated rose originally produced chiefly by crossing the tea rose and the hybrid perpetual.
  • hybridised — Simple past tense and past participle of hybridise.
  • hybridized — Simple past tense and past participle of hybridize.
  • hybridizer — One who hybridizes.
  • hybridizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of hybridize.
  • hybridomas — Plural form of hybridoma.
  • hydrophobe — a hydrophobic substance.
  • hydrophoby — Archaic form of hydrophobia.
  • hygrophobe — a plant that grows best with little or no moisture
  • hyoid bone — the horseshoe-shaped bone that lies at the base of the tongue and above the thyroid cartilage or a corresponding bone or group of bones in other vertebrates
  • hypabyssal — (of an igneous rock) intermediate in texture between coarse-grained intrusive rocks and fine-grained extrusive rocks.
  • hyperbaric — (of an anesthetic) having a specific gravity greater than that of cerebrospinal fluid. Compare hypobaric.
  • hyperbatic — relating to a hyperbaton
  • hyperbaton — the use, especially for emphasis, of a word order other than the expected or usual one, as in “Bird thou never wert.”.
  • hyperbolas — Plural form of hyperbola.
  • hyperboles — Plural form of hyperbole.
  • hyperbolic — having the nature of hyperbole; exaggerated.
  • hypercubes — Plural form of hypercube.
  • hypoblasts — Plural form of hypoblast.
  • hypsophobe — a person who suffers from hypsophobia
  • inhability — (obsolete) unsuitableness; inability.
  • inhibitory — to restrain, hinder, arrest, or check (an action, impulse, etc.).
  • johnny reb — U.S. History. a Confederate soldier.
  • labyrinths — Plural form of labyrinth.
  • lévy-bruhl — Lucien (lysjɛ̃). 1857–1939, French anthropologist and philosopher, noted for his study of the psychology of primitive peoples
  • monohybrid — the offspring of individuals that differ with respect to a particular gene pair.
  • moucharaby — a projecting second-storey window or balcony enclosed with latticework
  • murphy bed — a bed constructed so that it can be folded or swung into a closet.
  • mysophobia — a dread of dirt or filth.
  • mysophobic — a dread of dirt or filth.
  • neighborly — having or showing qualities befitting a neighbor; friendly.
  • newby hall — a mansion near Ripon in Yorkshire: built in 1705 and altered (1770–76) by Robert Adam
  • notch baby — a person who was born in the U.S. between 1917 and 1921 and as a retiree received lower cost-of-living increases in Social Security than others after Congress readjusted Social Security benefits in 1977.
  • phlebology — the study of the anatomy, physiology, and diseases of veins.
  • phlebotomy — the act or practice of opening a vein for letting or drawing blood as a therapeutic or diagnostic measure; venesection; bleeding.
  • phycobilin — any of a class of red or blue-green pigments found in the red algae and cyanobacteria
  • phycobiont — the algae component of a lichen.
  • polyhybrid — a heterozygous hybrid
  • pyrophobia — an abnormal fear of fire.
  • pyrophobic — an abnormal fear of fire.
  • rubythroat — a ruby-throated hummingbird
  • rugby head — a male follower of rugby culture
  • sheepberry — a North American shrub or small tree, Viburnum lentago, of the honeysuckle family, having flat-topped clusters of small white flowers and edible, berrylike black drupes.
  • ship's boy — a male attendant, as a cabin boy, steward, etc., employed to wait on a ship's passengers or officers.
  • shrewsbury — a city now part of Shrewsbury and Atcham, in Salop, in W England.
  • snobbishly — of, relating to, or characteristic of a snob: snobbish ideas about rank.
  • the beyond — the unknown; the world outside the range of human perception, esp life after death in certain religious beliefs
  • the bowery — a street in New York City noted for its cheap hotels and bars, frequented by vagrants and drunks
  • unbirthday — any day other than one's birthday
  • urban myth — a modern story of obscure origin and with little or no supporting evidence that spreads spontaneously in varying forms and often has elements of humor, moralizing, or horror: Are there alligators living in the New York City sewer system, or is that just an urban legend?
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