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10-letter words containing n, o, a, i, r

  • harbouring — a part of a body of water along the shore deep enough for anchoring a ship and so situated with respect to coastal features, whether natural or artificial, as to provide protection from winds, waves, and currents.
  • harmonical — Alternative form of harmonic.
  • harmonicas — Plural form of harmonica.
  • harmonicon — harmonica (def 1).
  • harmonious — marked by agreement in feeling, attitude, or action: a harmonious group.
  • harmonised — Simple past tense and past participle of harmonise.
  • harmoniser — (British spelling) alternative spelling of harmonizer.
  • harmonises — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of harmonise.
  • harmonists — Plural form of harmonist.
  • harmoniums — Plural form of harmonium.
  • harmonized — Add notes to (a melody) to produce harmony.
  • harmonizer — to bring into harmony, accord, or agreement: to harmonize one's views with the new situation.
  • harmonizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of harmonize.
  • harpooning — Present participle of harpoon.
  • harrington — James. 1611–77, English republican and writer. He described his ideal form of government in Oceana (1656)
  • hateration — (African American Vernacular English, slang) Hatred, hostility, animus.
  • hemikaryon — a haploid nucleus.
  • herakleion — a seaport in N Crete.
  • herniation — to protrude abnormally from an enclosed cavity or from the body so as to constitute a hernia.
  • hibernator — Something that hibernates.
  • hieromancy — divination through studying objects offered in sacrifice
  • hierophant — (in ancient Greece) an official expounder of rites of worship and sacrifice.
  • hierophany — A physical manifestation of the holy or sacred, serving as a spiritual eidolon for emulation or worship.
  • historians — Plural form of historian.
  • hogarthianWilliam, 1697–1764, English painter and engraver.
  • homorganic — (of two or more speech sounds) having the same place of articulation, as p, b, and m, which are all bilabial.
  • honoraries — Plural form of honorary.
  • honorarily — given for honor only, without the usual requirements, duties, privileges, emoluments, etc.: The university presented the new governor with an honorary degree.
  • honorarium — a payment in recognition of acts or professional services for which custom or propriety forbids a price to be set: The mayor was given a modest honorarium for delivering a speech to our club.
  • horizontal — at right angles to the vertical; parallel to level ground.
  • hormogonia — a portion of filament in blue-green algae that becomes detached and reproduces by cell division.
  • horn chair — a chair, especially of the late 19th-century U.S., having a frame made from steer, elk, buffalo, or other animal horns.
  • hortensial — (obsolete) Fit for a garden.
  • housetrain — To teach a house pet to urinate and defecate outside or in a designated location in the home.
  • hovertrain — an experimental high-speed train that rides on a cushion of air over a concrete guide track in the shape of an inverted T and is propelled by one or more propellers or jet engines.
  • humaniform — Like a human or that of a human in form, seeming, or appearance.
  • hyaluronic — Of or pertaining to hyaluronic acid or its derivatives.
  • hydromania — an excessive craving or love for water
  • hypertonia — increased rigidity, tension, and spasticity of the muscles.
  • hypodorian — denoting a plagal mode represented by the ascending diatonic scale from A to A
  • iatrogenic — (of a medical disorder) caused by the diagnosis, manner, or treatment of a physician.
  • ice anchor — a large, hooklike device for setting in ice to anchor a vessel or to provide a hold for a hawser in warping it along.
  • iconograph — symbolic representation, especially the conventional meanings attached to an image or images.
  • iconolatry — the worship or adoration of icons.
  • ideamonger — a person who originates and promotes or deals in ideas.
  • ignorances — the state or fact of being ignorant; lack of knowledge, learning, information, etc.
  • ignorantly — lacking in knowledge or training; unlearned: an ignorant man.
  • ignoration — The state of being ignorant.
  • immuration — to enclose within walls.
  • impersonal — not personal; without reference or connection to a particular person: an impersonal remark.
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