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10-letter words containing n, o, a, p, r, e

  • davenports — Plural form of davenport.
  • depuration — The action or process of freeing something of impurities.
  • drop-panel — a small quantity of liquid that falls or is produced in a more or less spherical mass; a liquid globule.
  • emplastron — a plaster containing a balm or medication
  • en rapport — in sympathy, harmony, or accord
  • endopleura — the internal coating of a seed
  • enoxaparin — A heparin of low molecular weight used to prevent and treat deep vein thrombosis or pulmonary embolism.
  • eruptional — relating to volcanic eruption
  • euphoriant — A drug which produces feelings of euphoria.
  • expiration — The ending of the fixed period for which a contract is valid.
  • flagperson — A gender-neutral term for someone who uses a flag, especially as a form of signalling.
  • fore plane — a plane, intermediate in size between a jack plane and a jointer plane, used for preliminary smoothing.
  • foretopman — a member of a ship's crew stationed on the foretop.
  • fort payne — a town in NE Alabama.
  • fortepiano — a piano of the late 18th and early 19th centuries with greater clarity but less volume, resonance, and dynamic range than a modern grand, revived in the late 20th century for the performance of the music of its period.
  • front-page — of major importance; worth putting on the first page of a newspaper.
  • godparents — Plural form of godparent.
  • gramophone — a phonograph.
  • granophyre — a fine-grained or porphyritic granitic rock with a micrographic intergrowth of the minerals of the groundmass.
  • grapestone — the seed of a grape.
  • green soap — a soap made chiefly from potassium hydroxide and linseed oil, used in treating some skin diseases.
  • ground pea — peanut.
  • harpooneer — A harpooner.
  • heptameron — A literary work whose action covers a period of seven days.
  • 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.
  • homopteran — homopterous.
  • hop garden — a field of hops
  • hydrophane — a partly translucent variety of opal, which becomes more translucent or transparent when immersed in water.
  • hydroplane — a seaplane.
  • hypaethron — a part of a building or court which is open to the sky
  • hyperbaton — the use, especially for emphasis, of a word order other than the expected or usual one, as in “Bird thou never wert.”.
  • hypernovae — Plural form of hypernova.
  • hyperpnoea — abnormally deep or rapid respiration.
  • hypertonia — increased rigidity, tension, and spasticity of the muscles.
  • hyphenator — One who, or that which, hyphenates.
  • hypothenar — the fleshly prominence on the palm at the base of the little finger.
  • impersonal — not personal; without reference or connection to a particular person: an impersonal remark.
  • importance — the quality or state of being important; consequence; significance.
  • incompared — incomparable; unmatched; unequalled
  • infraposed — placed beneath
  • inoperable — not operable or practicable.
  • inoperancy — The quality of being inoperant or inoperative, of lacking the power to be effective or effectual.
  • interpolar — connecting or being between poles: an interpolar flight.
  • interposal — (dated) interposure.
  • jazzperson — A jazz musician.
  • jeoparding — Present participle of jeopard.
  • juan peron — Eva Duarte de [ee-vuh dwahr-tey duh;; Spanish e-vah dwahr-te th e] /ˈi və ˈdwɑr teɪ də;; Spanish ˈɛ vɑ ˈdwɑr tɛ ðɛ/ (Show IPA), 1919–52, Argentine political figure (wife of Juan Perón).
  • kryptonate — (inorganic chemistry) To infuse a solid with krypton gas (especially with radioactive krypton-85).
  • lagerphone — (Australia) A generally homemade percussion instrument consisting of crown cap beer bottle tops loosely nailed to a pole (often a broom handle) and a board mounted cross-ways on the pole (the head of the broom), and played by striking the pole on the ground or with a stick, by drawing the serrated stick across the pole, or by shaking the instrument. (From 1952.).
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