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

  • chansonette — a little song
  • chansonnier — a writer of chansons
  • chaoticness — The state or quality of being chaotic.
  • chaperonins — Plural form of chaperonin.
  • charlestown — oldest part of Boston, at the mouth of the Charles River: site of the battle of Bunker Hill
  • checkpoints — Plural form of checkpoint.
  • chemosensor — A cell in a sense organ that can convert a chemical stimulus into some form of action.
  • cherrystone — a small or not fully-grown edible clam of the genus Mercenaria, found in the waters off the Atlantic coast of North America
  • chersoneses — Plural form of chersonese.
  • chessboxing — a sport in which participants contest alternating rounds of chess and boxing, of four and two minutes respectively
  • chevrotains — Plural form of chevrotain.
  • chiffoniers — Plural form of chiffonier.
  • china stone — a type of kaolinized granitic rock containing unaltered plagioclase
  • chindonesia — China, India, and Indonesia: seen collectively as the most important developing economies with the best growth markets for investors
  • chinoiserie — a style of decorative or fine art based on imitations of Chinese motifs
  • chirurgeons — Plural form of chirurgeon.
  • chloramines — Plural form of chloramine.
  • chlorinates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of chlorinate.
  • choanocytes — Plural form of choanocyte.
  • chokepoints — Plural form of chokepoint.
  • cholesterin — a sterol, C 27 H 46 O, that occurs in all animal tissues, especially in the brain, spinal cord, and adipose tissue, functioning chiefly as a protective agent in the skin and myelin sheaths of nerve cells, a detoxifier in the bloodstream, and as a precursor of many steroids: deposits of cholesterol form in certain pathological conditions, as gallstones and atherosclerotic plaques.
  • chorus line — the group of dancers who perform routines in a musical
  • christendom — All the Christian people and countries in the world can be referred to as Christendom.
  • chroniclers — Plural form of chronicler.
  • chronoscope — an instrument that registers small intervals of time on a dial, cathode-ray tube, etc
  • chrysoidine — a red-brown or greenish-black, crystalline solid, C 12 H 13 N 4 Cl, that yields orange colors in aqueous or alcohol solution: used chiefly in dyeing cotton and silk.
  • clean house — to clean and put a home in order
  • clothes-pin — a device, such as a forked piece of wood or plastic, for fastening articles to a clothesline.
  • clothesline — A clothesline is a thin rope on which you hang washing so that it can dry.
  • clothespins — Plural form of clothespin.
  • coelacanths — Plural form of coelacanth.
  • colophonies — Plural form of colophony.
  • coltishness — The state or condition of being coltish.
  • comprehends — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of comprehend.
  • coon cheese — a sharp crumbly cheddar cheese that has dark outer surfaces, usually enclosed in black wax.
  • corner shop — A corner shop is a small shop, usually on the corner of a street, that sells mainly food and household goods.
  • cornhuskers — Plural form of cornhusker.
  • cornish rex — a breed of cat with a very soft wavy coat, a small head, large eyes, and very large ears
  • countershot — a sequence of frames seen from the perspective of the subject of the previous shot
  • cowpunchers — Plural form of cowpuncher.
  • crochetings — a collection of crochet-work
  • cross-bench — a seat in Parliament occupied by a neutral or independent member
  • ctenophores — Plural form of ctenophore.
  • cushionless — without a cushion
  • decahedrons — Plural form of decahedron.
  • deinonychus — a genus of carnivorous dinosaur which existed in the early Cretaceous period, notable for the unusually large curved claws on the second toe of its feet
  • demolishing — Present participle of demolish.
  • demosthenes — 384–322 bc, Athenian statesman, orator, and lifelong opponent of the power of Macedonia over Greece
  • deschooling — to abolish or phase out traditional schools from, so as to replace them with alternative methods and forms of education.
  • disenshroud — to free from a shroud
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