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12-letter words containing n, o, t, h, e

  • trochanteric — belonging or relating to a trochanter
  • trochelminth — any invertebrate of the phylum Trochelminthes (now usually broken up into several phyla), comprising the rotifers, gastrotrichs, and several other forms.
  • trojan horse — Classical Mythology. a gigantic hollow wooden horse, left by the Greeks upon their pretended abandonment of the siege of Troy. The Trojans took it into Troy and Greek soldiers concealed in the horse opened the gates to the Greek army at night and conquered the city.
  • trondhjemite — a coarse-grained igneous rock composed of quartz, plagioclase feldspar, and a small amount of biotite.
  • tyrolean hat — a man's soft felt hat with a somewhat conical crown that is flat and creased at the top, a narrow brim partially turned up, and, usually, a feather for decoration
  • unauthorized — lacking permission; unsanctioned: unauthorized access.
  • uncoquettish — not flirtatious
  • underclothes — clothes worn under outer clothes.
  • underwrought — to do less work on than is necessary or required: to underwork an idea.
  • unfathomable — not able to be fathomed, or completely understood; incomprehensible: heroism in the face of unfathomable conflict.
  • unhospitable — not hospitable
  • unmethodical — characterized by lack of method or disorderliness
  • unmethodized — not organized systematically, according to a method
  • unnewsworthy — (of a story or incident) not important or significant enough to be considered news
  • unnoteworthy — worthy of notice or attention; notable; remarkable: a noteworthy addition to our collection of rare books.
  • unoverthrown — not overthrown
  • unprohibited — to forbid (an action, activity, etc.) by authority or law: Smoking is prohibited here.
  • unrhetorical — not rhetorical; literal; plainspoken
  • unworthiness — not worthy; lacking worth or excellence.
  • von stroheim — Erich [er-ik;; German ey-rikh] /ˈɛr ɪk;; German ˈeɪ rɪx/ (Show IPA), 1885–1957, U.S. actor and director, born in Austria.
  • weatherbound — (often nautical) Delayed or prevented by bad weather from doing something, such as travelling.
  • weatherwoman — a woman who works as a weathercaster.
  • weatherwomen — Plural form of weatherwoman.
  • west lothian — a historic county in S Scotland.
  • westinghouseGeorge, 1846–1914, U.S. inventor and manufacturer.
  • white bryony — a climbing herbaceous cucurbitaceous plant, Bryonia dioica, of Europe and North Africa, having greenish flowers and red berries
  • white salmon — the yellowtail, Seriola lalandei.
  • white-ground — pertaining to or designating a style of vase painting developed in Greece from the 6th to the 4th centuries b.c., characterized chiefly by a white background of slip onto which were painted polychromatic figures.
  • whittle down — To whittle down a group or thing means to gradually make it smaller.
  • whole-length — extended to or having its entire length; not shortened or abridged: a whole-length report.
  • wigtownshire — a historic county in SW Scotland.
  • wilton house — a mansion in Wilton in Wiltshire: built for the 1st Earl of Pembroke in the 16th century; rebuilt after a fire in 1647 by Inigo Jones and John Webb; altered in the 19th century by James Wyatt; landscaped grounds include a famous Palladian bridge
  • withholdment — the act of withholding
  • xanthogenate — Xanthate.
  • xanthopterin — a yellow pigment, C6H5N5O2, found in some butterfly or moth wings or in the urine of mammals
  • yachtsperson — A yachtsman or yachtswoman.
  • youthfulness — characterized by youth; young.
  • zone therapy — a type of massage which works on the theory that specific parts of the foot or palm of the hand are associated with different parts of the body, and that massaging the feet or hands will give the patient relief from disorders in the related part of the body
  • zootechnical — of or relating to zootechny
  • zooxanthella — any of various symbiotic yellow-green or yellow–brown algae in the cytoplasm of certain radiolarians and marine invertebrates.
  • zymotechnics — the art of managing the fermentation process
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