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10-letter words containing o, p, e, n, h, a

  • openhanded — generous; liberal: openhanded hospitality.
  • orphanages — Plural form of orphanage.
  • orthopnoea — difficult or painful breathing except in an erect sitting or standing position.
  • pantheonic — a domed circular temple at Rome, erected a.d. 120–124 by Hadrian, used as a church since a.d.
  • pantothere — any animal of the extinct order Pantotheria that lived during the late Mesozoic Era, believed to be the ancestor of the marsupial and placental mammals.
  • parenthood — the state, position, or relation of a parent.
  • parthenope — a siren, who drowned herself when Odysseus evaded the lure of the sirens' singing. Her body was said to have been cast ashore at what became Naples
  • pathogenic — Pathology. capable of producing disease: pathogenic bacteria.
  • peacherino — peach1 (def 4).
  • pentachord — a series of five consecutive notes of a scale
  • pentathlon — an athletic contest comprising five different track and field events and won by the contestant gaining the highest total score.
  • phaelonion — an item of religious clothing, worn in the Eastern Church, and taking the form of a garment without sleeves for the upper body, rather like a chasuble
  • phanerogam — any of the Phanerogamia, a former primary division of plants comprising those having reproductive organs; a flowering plant or seed plant (opposed to cryptogam).
  • phenolated — containing phenol; carbolated.
  • phenomenal — highly extraordinary or prodigious; exceptional: phenomenal speed.
  • phenoplast — phenolic resin.
  • pheromonal — relating to or constituting a pheromone
  • philoxenia — an act of hospitableness and welcome
  • phoenician — a native or inhabitant of Phoenicia.
  • phomvihane — Kaysone (ˈkaɪsɒn). 1920–92, Laotian Communist statesman; prime minister of Laos (1975–91); president (1991–92)
  • phone call — telephone call
  • phone card — calling card (def 3).
  • phone mail — voice mail
  • phone-jack — to steal the mobile phone from (a person)
  • phonematic — phonemic.
  • phonetical — Also, phonetical. of or relating to speech sounds, their production, or their transcription in written symbols.
  • phoney war — A phoney war is when two opposing groups are openly hostile towards each other, as if they were at war, but there is no real fighting.
  • 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
  • promethean — of or suggestive of Prometheus.
  • radiophone — a radiotelephone.
  • renography — x-ray examination of the kidney following injection of a radiopaque substance.
  • rhizoplane — the part of the root of a plant that is near the soil surface
  • rhodophane — the red colour found in the inner cones of the retina in animals
  • shape note — a musical note in which the degree of the scale is indicated by the shape of the note's head.
  • smartphone — a device that combines a cell phone with a handheld computer, typically offering Internet access, data storage, email capability, etc.
  • sophoclean — 495?–406? b.c, Greek dramatist.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • tachypnoea — excessively rapid respiration.
  • theophanic — a manifestation or appearance of God or a god to a person.
  • venography — x-ray examination of a vein or veins following injection of a radiopaque substance.
  • vibraphone — vibraharp.
  • xenography — The process of surgically transplanting organs or tissue between different species.
  • xenophanes — c570–c480 b.c, Greek philosopher and poet.
  • xenophilia — an attraction to foreign peoples, cultures, or customs.
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