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14-letter words containing m, h, o

  • comprehendible — comprehensible
  • comprehensible — Something that is comprehensible can be understood.
  • comprehensibly — capable of being comprehended or understood; intelligible.
  • comprehensions — Plural form of comprehension.
  • comprehensives — Plural form of comprehensive.
  • computerphobia — the fear or dislike of computers
  • computerphobic — a computerphobe
  • coppersmithing — The work of a coppersmith; the forging of copper.
  • cosmochemistry — the study of the chemical composition of the celestial bodies
  • cosmographical — Of or pertaining to cosmography.
  • costume change — a change of costume by an actor
  • cough medicine — Cough medicine is liquid medicine that you take when you have a cough.
  • countercharmed — Simple past tense and past participle of countercharm.
  • countermarched — Simple past tense and past participle of countermarch.
  • countermarches — Plural form of countermarch.
  • crenshaw melon — a variety of melon resembling the casaba, having pinkish flesh.
  • crimean gothic — a form of the Gothic language that survived in the Crimea after the extinction of Gothic elsewhere in Europe, known only from a list of words and phrases recorded in the 16th century.
  • croquembouches — Plural form of croquembouche.
  • cross matching — the testing for compatibility of a donor's and a recipient's blood prior to transfusion, in which serum of each is mixed with red blood cells of the other and observed for hemagglutination.
  • cross my heart — You can say 'cross my heart' when you want someone to believe that you are telling the truth. You can also ask 'cross your heart?', when you are asking someone if they are really telling the truth.
  • cryptorchidism — a congenital condition in which one or both testicles fail to descend into the scrotum
  • cut the comedy — to stop joking
  • cytophotometer — an instrument for examining cells by determining the intensity or wavelengths of light transmitted through them.
  • cytophotometry — the use of a photometer in order to study the chemical compounds of a cell
  • deep hack mode — hack mode
  • dehumanisation — Alternative spelling of dehumanization.
  • dehumanization — to deprive of human qualities or attributes; divest of individuality: Conformity dehumanized him.
  • demythologised — Simple past tense and past participle of demythologise.
  • demythologized — Simple past tense and past participle of demythologize.
  • demythologizer — a person who removes mythical elements from something
  • deoxythymidine — (organic chemistry) thymidine.
  • dermatoglyphic — relating to skin markings (such as fingerprints) or the study thereof
  • dermatographia — a common medical condition in which lightly rubbing the skin produces red, often raised, temporary marks
  • dermatographic — relating to dermatography
  • detention home — a place where juvenile offenders or delinquents are held in custody, esp. temporarily pending disposition of their cases by the juvenile court
  • diamond-shaped — rhombic
  • dichotomically — division into two parts, kinds, etc.; subdivision into halves or pairs.
  • dichromic acid — an unstable dibasic oxidizing acid known only in solution and in the form of dichromate salts. Formula: H2Cr2O7
  • diffeomorphism — a differentiable homeomorphism.
  • dimethylketone — acetone.
  • dio chrysostom — 2nd century ad, Greek orator and philosopher
  • dowager's hump — a type of kyphosis, common in older women, in which the shoulders become rounded and the upper back develops a hump: caused by osteoporosis resulting in skeletal deformity.
  • draconic month — Also called calendar month. any of the twelve parts, as January or February, into which the calendar year is divided.
  • dragon's mouth — arethusa (def 1).
  • drummond light — calcium light.
  • duchamp-villon — Raymond [re-mawn] /rɛˈmɔ̃/ (Show IPA), 1876–1918, French sculptor (brother of Jacques Villon and Marcel Duchamp).
  • dutch reformed — of or relating to a Protestant denomination (Dutch Reformed Church) founded by Dutch settlers in New York in 1628 and renamed the Reformed Church in America in 1867.
  • dutchman's log — a method of gauging a ship's speed, in which the distance between two shipboard observation stations is divided by the time elapsing between the throwing overboard of an object by the first station and the sighting of it by the second.
  • echocardiogram — a graphic record produced by an echocardiograph.
  • edriophthalmic — edriophthalmous
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