10-letter words containing o, n, a, s, h, e
- oafishness — The state of being oafish.
- oberhausen — a city in W Germany, in the lower Ruhr valley.
- ogden nash — John, 1752–1835, English architect and city planner.
- open flash — a photographic technique employing a flash fired while the camera shutter is held open.
- orphanages — Plural form of orphanage.
- phenoplast — phenolic resin.
- phosphagen — a high-energy phosphoric ester that serves as a reservoir of phosphate-bond energy, as phosphocreatine in vertebrates and phosphoarginine in invertebrates.
- poachiness — the state of being poachy
- rawsthorne — Alan. 1905–71, English composer, whose works include three symphonies, several concertos, and a set of Symphonic Studies (1939)
- scherzando — (a musical direction) playful; sportive.
- schongauer — Martin [mahr-tn;; German mahr-teen] /ˈmɑr tn;; German ˈmɑr tin/ (Show IPA), c1430–91, German engraver and painter.
- sea anchor — any of various devices, as a drogue, that have great resistance to being pulled through the water and are dropped forward of a vessel at the end of a cable to hold the bow into the wind or sea during a storm.
- secondhand — not directly known or experienced; obtained from others or from books: Most of our knowledge is secondhand.
- shackleton — Sir Ernest Henry, 1874–1922, English explorer of the Antarctic.
- shake down — an act or instance of shaking, rocking, swaying, etc.
- shake-down — an act or instance of shaking, rocking, swaying, etc.
- shape note — a musical note in which the degree of the scale is indicated by the shape of the note's head.
- shear zone — Geology. a zone of closely spaced, approximately parallel faults or dispersed displacements.
- shenandoah — a river flowing NE from N Virginia to the Potomac at Harpers Ferry, West Virginia. About 200 miles (322 km) long.
- shoshonean — (in some, especially earlier, classifications) a grouping of four branches of the Uto-Aztecan language family including Numic, Hopi, and several languages of southern California.
- shot angle — the angle from which a shot is taken
- smartphone — a device that combines a cell phone with a handheld computer, typically offering Internet access, data storage, email capability, etc.
- snakemouth — rose pogonia.
- sophoclean — 495?–406? b.c, Greek dramatist.
- sound head — a mechanism through which film passes in a projector for conversion of the soundtrack into audio-frequency signals that can be amplified and reproduced.
- sousaphone — a form of bass tuba, similar to the helicon, used in brass bands.
- sphenogram — a cuneiform character.
- sphenoidal — relating to the sphenoid bone
- stenograph — any of various keyboard instruments, somewhat resembling a typewriter, used for writing in shorthand, as by means of phonetic or arbitrary symbols.
- stonebrash — a type of subsoil consisting of small or broken stones or rock
- sulphonate — a salt or ester of any sulphonic acid containing the ion RSO2O– or the group RSO2O–, R being an organic group
- synaloepha — the blending of two successive vowels into one, especially the coalescence of a vowel at the end of one word with a vowel at the beginning of the next.
- theodosian — of or relating to Theodosius I, who made Christianity the official state religion of the Roman Empire.
- unhandsome — lacking good looks; not attractive in physical appearance; plain or ugly.
- unshadowed — not shadowed; not darkened or obscured by shadow; free from gloom.
- welshwoman — a woman who is a native or inhabitant of Wales.
- whalebones — Plural form of whalebone.
- wheatstone — Sir Charles, 1802–75, English physicist and inventor.
- xenophanes — c570–c480 b.c, Greek philosopher and poet.