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

  • hot-tempered — easily angered; short-tempered.
  • hotchpotches — Plural form of hotchpotch.
  • hotelkeepers — Plural form of hotelkeeper.
  • housepainter — A professional painter of houses.
  • hydnocarpate — a salt or ester of hydnocarpic acid.
  • hydrophilite — a white mineral consisting of potassium and calcium
  • hydrotherapy — the branch of therapeutics that deals with the curative use of water.
  • hymenoplasty — (medicine) Plastic surgery affecting a woman's hymen, usually involving reconstruction to the unbroken condition ordinarily characteristic of virginity.
  • hymenopteran — hymenopterous.
  • hymenopteron — hymenopteran.
  • hyperchaotic — Of or pertaining to hyperchaos.
  • hypercoaster — Megacoaster.
  • hypercorrect — overly correct; excessively fastidious; fussy: hypercorrect manners.
  • hyperfiction — nonlinear fiction created in electronic hypertext form and containing multiple plot developments, endings, etc., that can be evoked interactively.
  • hypermetropy — Dated form of hypermetropia.
  • hyperostosis — abnormal development of bony tissue.
  • hyperreactor — a person who behaves in a hyperreactive manner
  • hypertension — Pathology. elevation of the blood pressure, especially the diastolic pressure. an arterial disease characterized by this condition.
  • hyperthyroid — of, relating to, or having hyperthyroidism.
  • hypertrophic — abnormal enlargement of a part or organ; excessive growth.
  • hypnotherapy — treatment of a symptom, disease, or addiction by means of hypnotism.
  • hypnotisable — Alternative spelling of hypnotizable.
  • hypnotizable — One who is susceptible to hypnosis.
  • hypochlorite — a salt or ester of hypochlorous acid.
  • hypoesthesia — an abnormally weak sense of pain, heat, cold, or touch.
  • hypoeutectic — (of steel) having less carbon than the 0.8 percent of eutectoid steel.
  • hyponatremia — (medicine) An abnormally low concentration of sodium (or salt) in blood plasma.
  • hypostasised — to assume the reality of (an idea, proposition, etc.); hypostatize.
  • hypostatised — to treat or regard (a concept, idea, etc.) as a distinct substance or reality.
  • hypostatized — Simple past tense and past participle of hypostatize.
  • hyposulphate — a salt derived from hyposulphuric acid
  • hyposulphite — Also called hydrosulfite. a salt of hyposulfurous acid.
  • hypothecated — Simple past tense and past participle of hypothecate.
  • hypothecator — to pledge to a creditor as security without delivering over; mortgage.
  • hypothesis's — a proposition, or set of propositions, set forth as an explanation for the occurrence of some specified group of phenomena, either asserted merely as a provisional conjecture to guide investigation (working hypothesis) or accepted as highly probable in the light of established facts.
  • hypothesised — to form a hypothesis.
  • hypothesises — to form a hypothesis.
  • hypothesized — Simple past tense and past participle of hypothesize.
  • hypothesizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of hypothesize.
  • hypothetical — assumed by hypothesis; supposed: a hypothetical case.
  • hypoxanthine — a white, crystalline, almost water-soluble, alkaloidal purine derivative, C 5 H 4 N 4 O, found in animal and vegetable tissues: used chiefly in biochemical research.
  • hysteroscopy — (medicine) The examination of the uterus using a hysteroscope.
  • inhospitable — not inclined to, or characterized by, hospitality, as persons or actions; unfriendly.
  • ionospherist — Someone who studies the ionosphere.
  • iontotherapy — (medicine) The therapeutic use of iontophoresis.
  • ip telephony — (communications)   (IPT, Internet Telephony) Use of IP data connections to exchange voice and fax data that have traditionally been carried over the public switched telephone network. During the late 1990s, an increasing number of telephone calls have been routed over the Internet. Calls made in this way avoid PSTN charges. Unlike traditional telephony, IP telephony is relatively unregulated. Companies providing these services are known as Internet Telephony Service Providers (ITSPs). They include telephone companies, cable TV companies and Internet Service Providers (ISPs). There are still many problems with voice quality, latency, compression algorithms, and quality of service. See also Computer Telephone Integration.
  • joseph brantJoseph (Thayendanegea) 1742–1807, Mohawk Indian chief who fought on the side of the British in the American Revolution.
  • jump shooter — a player skilled at jump shots.
  • ken thompson — (person)   The principal inventor of the Unix operating system and author of the B language, the predecessor of C. In the early days Ken used to hand-cut Unix distribution tapes, often with a note that read "Love, ken". Old-timers still use his first name (sometimes uncapitalised, because it's a login name and mail address) in third-person reference; it is widely understood (on Usenet in particular) that without a last name "Ken" refers only to Ken Thompson. Similarly, Dennis without last name means Dennis Ritchie (and he is often known as dmr). Ken was first hired to work on the Multics project, which was a huge production with many people working on it. Multics was supposed to support hundreds of on-line logins but could barely handle three. In 1969, when Bell Labs withdrew from the project, Ken got fed up with Multics and went off to write his own operating system. People said "well, if zillions of people wrote Multics, then an OS written by one guy must be Unix!". There was some joking about eunichs as well. Ken's wife Bonnie and son Corey (then 18 months old) went to visit family in San Diego. Ken spent one week each on the kernel, file system, etc., and finished UNIX in one month along with developing SPACEWAR (or was it "Space Travel"?). See also back door, brute force, demigod, wumpus.
  • kinetography — a camera for taking pictures for a kinetoscope.
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