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11-letter words containing p, a, c, h, l

  • hemeralopic — (medicine) Unable to see clearly in bright light; day-blind; suffering from hemeralopia.
  • hemophiliac — Also, hemophile. a person having hemophilia.
  • high places — (in ancient Semitic religions) a place of worship, usually a temple or altar on a hilltop.
  • hippocampal — of or relating to the hippocampus.
  • holographic — Also, holographic [hol-uh-graf-ik, hoh-luh-] /ˌhɒl əˈgræf ɪk, ˌhoʊ lə-/ (Show IPA), holographical. wholly written by the person in whose name it appears: a holograph letter.
  • homoplastic — correspondence in form or structure, owing to a similar environment.
  • homotypical — (biology) homotypal.
  • house place — (in medieval architecture) a room common to all the inhabitants of a house, as a hall.
  • hypallactic — relating to a hypallage
  • hypercasual — Extremely casual.
  • hypercholia — abnormally large secretion of bile.
  • hyperdactyl — having an excessive number of fingers or toes
  • hyperplasic — Relating to hyperplasia.
  • hypoblastic — Of, or relating to the hypoblast.
  • hypocaloric — That is low in dietary calories.
  • hypocentral — (geology) Of or pertaining to the hypocentre of an earthquake.
  • hypokalemic — Having a low percentage of potassium in one's blood.
  • hypoplastic — Pathology. abnormal deficiency of cells or structural elements.
  • impeachable — making one subject to impeachment, as misconduct in office.
  • isenthalpic — pertaining to or characterized by constant enthalpy.
  • isocephalic — (of a composition) having the heads of all figures on approximately the same level.
  • isophthalic — Of or pertaining to isophthalic acid and its derivatives.
  • ithyphallic — of or relating to the phallus carried in ancient festivals of Bacchus.
  • lady chapel — a chapel dedicated to the Virgin Mary, attached to a church, and generally behind the high altar at the extremity of the apse.
  • lagomorphic — Shaped like a hare.
  • leprechauns — a dwarf or sprite.
  • lexigraphic — Of or pertaining to lexigraphy.
  • logographic — of, relating to, or using logograms.
  • lophobranch — belonging or pertaining to the Lophobranchii, the group of fishes comprising the pipefishes, sea horses, snipefishes, trumpetfishes, etc.
  • lycanthrope — a person affected with lycanthropy.
  • lycanthropy — a delusion in which one imagines oneself to be a wolf or other wild animal.
  • macrophylum — a group of languages that are of a higher order than a phylum
  • malacophily — pollination of plants by snails
  • match plate — a plate on which patterns are set to be molded.
  • megacephaly — macrocephalic.
  • microcephal — a person with microcephaly
  • multiphasic — having many phases, stages, aspects, or the like.
  • myelopathic — any disorder of the spinal cord or of bone marrow.
  • necrophilia — an erotic attraction to corpses.
  • nephritical — Alternative form of nephritic.
  • nonphysical — of or relating to the body: physical exercise.
  • nyckelharpa — an old-time Swedish stringed musical instrument, similar to the hurdy-gurdy but sounded with a bow instead of a wheel.
  • ochlophobia — an abnormal fear of crowds.
  • omphalocele — A hernia of the navel.
  • ophicalcite — a type of marble containing serpentine and calcite
  • pachydactyl — with thick digits
  • pachydermal — having the characteristics of a pachyderm
  • paleolithic — (sometimes lowercase) Anthropology. of, relating to, or characteristic of the cultures of the late Pliocene and the Pleistocene epochs, or early phase of the Stone Age, which appeared first in Africa and are marked by the steady development of stone tools and later antler and bone artifacts, engravings on bone and stone, sculpted figures, and paintings and engravings on the walls of caves and rock-shelters: usually divided into three periods (Lower Paleolithic, c2,000,000–c200,000 b.c., Middle Paleolithic, c150,000–c40,000 b.c., Upper Paleolithic, c40,000–c10,000 b.c.)
  • pancha sila — a standard recitation of Hinayanists, including repetitions of formulas and of vows to abstain from anger, lust, cowardice, malevolence, and to abstain from the desire for possessions and unwholesome pleasures.
  • panhellenic — of or relating to all Greeks or to Panhellenism.
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