0%

11-letter words containing i, r, s, h, e

  • dress shirt — a man's shirt worn for formal or semiformal evening dress, usually having French cuffs and a stiff or pleated front to be fastened with studs.
  • drive shaft — a shaft for imparting torque from a power source or prime mover to machinery.
  • dronishness — the quality or capacity to drone
  • drouthiness — the state or condition of being thirsty or dry
  • dystrophies — Plural form of dystrophy.
  • eames chair — Also called LCM chair. a side chair designed by Charles Eames in 1946, having a slender tubular steel frame with a seat and back of molded plywood panels.
  • earthliness — of or relating to the earth, especially as opposed to heaven; worldly.
  • ecclesiarch — a sacristan, especially of a monastery.
  • echinoderms — Plural form of echinoderm.
  • echoviruses — Plural form of echovirus.
  • elsewhither — Somewhither else; to some other place; in some other direction.
  • embellisher — A person who embellishes.
  • emperorship — The rank or office of an emperor.
  • enarthrosis — A ball-and-socket joint.
  • enfranchise — Give the right to vote to.
  • enrichments — Plural form of enrichment.
  • enshrouding — Present participle of enshroud.
  • ephemerides — Plural form of ephemeris.
  • epigraphist — A person who studies epigraphy (inscriptions).
  • epimorphism — (category theory) A morphism p such that for any other pair of morphisms f and g, if f \\circ p = g \\circ p, then f = g.
  • eriophorous — relating to cotton grass
  • erythristic — Exhibiting erythrism.
  • erythropsia — a defect of vision in which objects appear red
  • erythrosine — a fluorone, tetraiodo-fluorescein, which is used as a red food colouring (E127) and in biological staining
  • escherichia — a genus of Gram-negative rodlike bacteria that are found in the intestines of humans and many animals, esp E. coli, which is sometimes pathogenic and is widely used in genetic research
  • establisher — A person who establishes something.
  • eucharistic — (Theosophy) Pertaining to the Eucharist.
  • eurhythmics — Alternative spelling of eurythmics.
  • eurhythmist — a person who teaches or practises eurhythmics
  • exhilarates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of exhilarate.
  • far-sighted — seeing objects at a distance more clearly than those near at hand; hyperopic.
  • festschrift — (often initial capital letter) a volume of articles, essays, etc., contributed by many authors in honor of a colleague, usually published on the occasion of retirement, an important anniversary, or the like.
  • fiddlerfish — any of several guitarfishes, especially Trygonorhina fasciata, of Australia.
  • figureheads — Plural form of figurehead.
  • fingerholes — hole in a wind instrument
  • fire-polish — to smooth (glass) by reheating to remove tool marks or other imperfections in the surface.
  • first reich — the Holy Roman Empire until its dissolution in 1806.
  • fish course — A fish course is a part of a meal in which fish is served, usually before the entrée.
  • fish farmer — someone who rears fish for commercial purposes
  • fish finger — Fish fingers are small long pieces of fish covered in breadcrumbs. They are usually sold in frozen form.
  • fish ladder — a series of ascending pools constructed to enable salmon or other fish to swim upstream around or over a dam.
  • fish manure — solid waste from fish, used as a fertilizer
  • fish market — a market selling fish
  • fish warden — a public official who enforces game laws relating to fish.
  • fisher king — (in the story of Percival) the custodian of the Grail.
  • fisherwoman — a woman who fishes, whether for profit or pleasure.
  • fisherwomen — Plural form of fisherwoman.
  • fishetarian — (informal) pescetarian; one who eats no meat other than fish.
  • fishmongers — Plural form of fishmonger.
  • flash drive — Also called flash memory drive, thumb drive, USB drive. a very small, portable, solid-state hard drive that can be inserted into a USB port for storage and retrieval of data.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?