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11-letter words containing n, o, h, e

  • rhetorician — an expert in the art of rhetoric.
  • rhinestoned — adorned with rhinestones
  • rhinorrhoea — an excessive discharge of mucus from the nose.
  • rhododaphne — a shrub with narrow, poisonous evergreen leaves and attractive pink flowers, also known as oleander or rosebay
  • rhone river — a river flowing from the Alps in S Switzerland through the Lake of Geneva and SE France into the Mediterranean. 504 miles (810 km) long.
  • rhône-alpes — a region of E France: mainly mountainous, rising to the edge of the Massif Central in the west and the French Alps in the east; drained by the Rivers Rhône, Saône, and Isère
  • rhynchocoel — a cavity found in certain invertebrate worms which contains the sucking organ
  • right money — any circulating medium of exchange, including coins, paper money, and demand deposits.
  • rinthereout — a vagrant or homeless person
  • roman shade — a window shade that, when raised, is drawn up into a series of concertina folds.
  • rompishness — the state or condition of being rompish
  • rope-length — a length of standard climbing rope, normally 50–60m
  • rough lemon — a variety of lemon that has orange-yellow, rough-skinned fruit and is used as a rootstock for the cultivation of other citrus fruits.
  • roundarched — having semicircular arches
  • roundheaded — (of a person) possessing a round head; brachycephalic.
  • saddle horn — horn (def 19).
  • sand hopper — beach flea.
  • scenography — the art of representing objects in accordance with the rules of perspective.
  • schecklaton — a gilded leather used for embroidering jacks
  • schizogenic — reproducing or formed by fission.
  • schollanderDonald ("Don") born 1946, U.S. swimmer.
  • schrodinger — Erwin [er-vin] /ˈɛr vɪn/ (Show IPA), 1887–1961, German physicist: Nobel prize 1933.
  • scotch pine — a pine, Pinus sylvestris, of Eurasia, having a reddish trunk and twisted, bluish-green needles.
  • screen shot — Also called screen capture. a copy or image of what is seen on a computer screen at a given time: Save the screenshot as a graphics file.
  • screenshort — a screenshot that is shared on a social media website.
  • scrimshoner — a person who makes scrimshaw
  • second hand — the hand that indicates the seconds on a clock or watch.
  • second home — an additional residence, as at the shore or in the country, where one goes on weekends, vacations, and the like.
  • second-half — happening in the second half of a game
  • second-hand — the hand that indicates the seconds on a clock or watch.
  • semimonthly — made, occurring, done, or published twice a month.
  • senatorship — the office or position of a senator
  • serrano ham — cured ham from Spain
  • servanthood — the condition of being a servant
  • sex hormone — any of a class of steroid hormones that regulate the growth and function of the reproductive organs or stimulate the development of the secondary sexual characteristics.
  • shacklebone — the wrist
  • shade-grown — grown in the shade, especially in artificial shade, as under a cloth.
  • shake on it — to shake hands in agreement, reconciliation, etc
  • shallowness — of little depth; not deep: shallow water.
  • sharonville — a town in SW Ohio.
  • sharp-nosed — having a thin, pointed nose.
  • sherlockian — pertaining to or characteristic of the fictional detective Sherlock Holmes, known for his skill in solving mysteries through deductive reasoning.
  • sherringtonSir Charles Scott, 1861–1952, English physiologist: Nobel Prize in medicine 1932.
  • shimonoseki — a seaport on SW Honshu, in SW Japan: treaty ending Sino-Japanese War signed 1895.
  • shine up to — to give forth or glow with light; shed or cast light.
  • shingle oak — an oak, Quercus imbricaria, yielding a wood used for shingles, clapboards, etc.
  • shoe-string — a shoelace.
  • shopkeeping — a retail merchant or tradesman; a person who owns or operates a small store or shop.
  • short jenny — an in-off into a middle pocket
  • short money — (in Britain) the annual payment made to Opposition parties in the House of Commons to help them pay for certain services necessary to the carrying out of their parliamentary duties; established in 1975
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