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11-letter words containing l, y, a, m, h

  • lucky charm — an object that is believed to bring its owner good luck
  • lymph gland — any of the glandlike masses of tissue in the lymphatic vessels containing cells that become lymphocytes.
  • lymphangial — pertaining to the lymphatic vessels.
  • lymphoblast — a large, metabolically active lymphocyte shortly before it enters into mitosis.
  • lymphopenia — a reduction in the number of lymphocytes in the blood.
  • macrophylum — a group of languages that are of a higher order than a phylum
  • malacophily — pollination of plants by snails
  • malt whisky — whisky, as Scotch, made entirely from malted barley.
  • maple honey — maple syrup.
  • matchlessly — In a matchless manner.
  • maximaphily — the collection or study of picture postcards which depict a picture similar, or identical, to that on the stamp, and which also have a related postmark
  • megacephaly — macrocephalic.
  • mesenchymal — Of or pertaining to the mesenchyme.
  • metaldehyde — a chemical, (CH3CHO)4, that is a polymer of acetaldehyde, used to kill slugs and snails and also as a fuel for portable stoves
  • methacrylic — denoting a type of acid
  • methylamine — any of three derivatives of ammonia in which one or all of the hydrogen atoms are replaced by methyl groups, especially a gas, CH 5 N, with an ammonialike odor, the simplest alkyl derivative of ammonia and, like the latter, forming a series of salts.
  • methylating — Present participle of methylate.
  • methylation — the process of replacing a hydrogen atom with a methyl group.
  • moholy-nagy — László [las-loh;; Hungarian lahs-loh] /ˈlæs loʊ;; Hungarian ˈlɑs loʊ/ (Show IPA), or Ladislaus [lah-dis-lous] /ˈlɑ dɪsˌlaʊs/ (Show IPA), 1895–1946, Hungarian painter, designer, and photographer, in the U.S. after 1936.
  • myelography — the production of myelograms.
  • myelopathic — any disorder of the spinal cord or of bone marrow.
  • opthamology — Misspelling of ophthalmology.
  • pachydermal — having the characteristics of a pachyderm
  • parenchymal — Botany. the fundamental tissue of plants, composed of thin-walled cells able to divide.
  • phenylamine — aniline.
  • phyllomania — the production of leaves in abnormal numbers or places.
  • physicalism — a doctrine associated with logical positivism and holding that every meaningful statement, other than the necessary statements of logic and mathematics, must refer directly or indirectly to observable properties of spatiotemporal things or events.
  • polychasium — a form of cymose inflorescence in which each axis produces more than two lateral axes.
  • rhyme royal — a form of verse introduced into English by Chaucer, consisting of seven-line stanzas of iambic pentameter in which there are three rhymes, the first line rhyming with the third, the second with the fourth and fifth, and the sixth with the seventh.
  • rush family — the plant family Juncaceae, characterized by herbaceous plants having narrow, grasslike leaves, small and greenish flowers, and capsular fruit with three compartments, comprising the true rushes.
  • shamelessly — lacking any sense of shame: immodest; audacious.
  • sky marshal — an armed plainclothes federal marshal riding on an airliner to protect against skyjacking.
  • slant rhyme — rhyme in which either the vowels or the consonants of stressed syllables are identical, as in eyes, light; years, yours.
  • szombathely — a city in W Hungary: founded a.d. 48.
  • thermically — in a thermic manner
  • thermopylae — a pass in E Greece, between the cliffs of Mt. Oeta and the Gulf of Lamia: Persian defeat of the Spartans 480 b.c.
  • unashamedly — not ashamed; not restrained by embarrassment or consciousness of moral guilt: a liar unashamed even after public disgrace.
  • unharmfully — in an unharmful way
  • whigmaleery — whigmaleerie.
  • whimsically — given to whimsy or fanciful notions; capricious: a pixyish, whimsical fellow.
  • zanthoxylum — any rutaceous shrub or tree of the genus Zanthoxylum, of temperate and subtropical E Asia and North America: includes the prickly ash and the West Indian yellowwood (or satinwood)
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