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

  • chondrocyte — A cell that makes up the tissue of cartilage.
  • chordophone — any musical instrument producing sounds through the vibration of strings, such as the piano, harp, violin, or guitar
  • 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.
  • chrominance — the quality of light that causes the sensation of colour. It is determined by comparison with a reference source of the same brightness and of known chromaticity
  • chromogenic — producing colour
  • chroniclers — Plural form of chronicler.
  • chronologer — A chronologist.
  • chronometer — A chronometer is an extremely accurate clock that is used especially by sailors at sea.
  • chronometre — (nonstandard, and, now, largely obsolete) Alternative form of chronometer.
  • chronometry — the science or technique of measuring time with extreme accuracy
  • 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.
  • churchwomen — Plural form of churchwoman.
  • clinochlore — a mineral similar to chlorite in appearance
  • coat hanger — A coat hanger is a curved piece of wood, metal, or plastic that you hang a piece of clothing on.
  • coinherence — the act of inhering together
  • coinheritor — a fellow inheritor
  • comprehends — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of comprehend.
  • cool hunter — a person who is employed to identify future trends, esp in fashion or the media
  • 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
  • countermyth — a myth that conflicts with another myth
  • countershot — a sequence of frames seen from the perspective of the subject of the previous shot
  • cowpunchers — Plural form of cowpuncher.
  • craniophore — a device that holds a skull in place for measuring.
  • crochetings — a collection of crochet-work
  • cross-bench — a seat in Parliament occupied by a neutral or independent member
  • crown ether — a type of cyclic ether consisting of a ring of carbon and oxygen atoms, with two or more carbon atoms between each oxygen atom
  • crown vetch — a trailing leguminous European plant, Coronilla varia, with clusters of white or pink flowers: cultivated in North America as a border plant
  • crown wheel — the wheel next to the winding knob that has one set of teeth at right angles to the other
  • ctenophoran — of a ctenophore
  • ctenophores — Plural form of ctenophore.
  • decahedrons — Plural form of decahedron.
  • decoherence — the process in which a system's behaviour changes from that which can be explained by quantum mechanics to that which can be explained by classical mechanics
  • dehortation — an exhortation against a course of action
  • dehydration — the act or process of dehydrating.
  • dendroglyph — the art of carving in the bark of a living tree, esp as practised by the aboriginal peoples of New Zealand
  • dendrophile — One who loves trees.
  • diamorphine — heroin.
  • dinner hour — lunch hour
  • dinotherium — any elephantlike mammal of the extinct genus Dinotherium, from the later Tertiary Period of Europe and Asia, having large, outwardly curving tusks.
  • disenshroud — to free from a shroud
  • disenthrone — to dethrone.
  • dishonoured — Simple past tense and past participle of dishonour.
  • dishonourer — One who dishonours.
  • disthronize — to dethrone
  • dog handler — a member of the police force, a security organization, etc, who works in collaboration with a specially trained dog
  • door handle — doorknob.
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