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8-letter words containing p, h, a, n, e

  • nephtali — Naphtali.
  • nymphaea — a room or area having a fountain, statues, flowers, etc.
  • nymphean — Of or pertaining to a nymph or nymphs.
  • orphaned — a child who has lost both parents through death, or, less commonly, one parent.
  • pan head — a tripod head permitting vertical or horizontal rotation of a camera to any position.
  • pancheon — a wide, shallow bowl, originally used for making bread or separating cream
  • pantheon — a national monument in Paris, France, used as a sepulcher for eminent French persons, begun in 1764 by Soufflot as the church of Ste. Geneviève and secularized in 1885.
  • panthera — a genus of chiefly large cats that includes the snow leopard, tiger, leopard, jaguar, and lion, most having the ability to roar.
  • parishen — a parishioner
  • pathname — the sequence of symbols and names indicating the location of a particular file in a hierarchical file system.
  • pathogen — any disease-producing agent, especially a virus, bacterium, or other microorganism.
  • paunched — a large and protruding belly; potbelly.
  • payphone — a public telephone requiring that the caller deposit coins or use a credit card to pay for a call.
  • peaching — to inform against an accomplice or associate.
  • pechenga — a village in the NW Russian Federation, on the Arctic Ocean W of Murmansk: ice-free all year; ceded by Finland 1944.
  • penchant — a strong inclination, taste, or liking for something: a penchant for outdoor sports.
  • pentarch — a government by five persons.
  • perianth — the envelope of a flower, whether calyx or corolla or both.
  • phaethon — a son of Helios who borrowed the chariot of the sun and drove it so close to earth that Zeus struck him down to save the world.
  • phalange — a phalanx.
  • phase in — any of the major appearances or aspects in which a thing of varying modes or conditions manifests itself to the eye or mind.
  • phase-in — an act or instance of phasing in; gradual introduction or implementation.
  • pheasant — any of numerous large, usually long-tailed, Old World gallinaceous birds of the family Phasianidae, widely introduced.
  • phenicia — an ancient kingdom on the Mediterranean, in the region of modern Syria, Lebanon, and Israel.
  • phonecam — a digital camera incorporated in a mobile phone
  • planchet — a flat piece of metal for stamping as a coin; a coin blank.
  • prehuman — preceding the appearance or existence of human beings: the prehuman ages.
  • sandheap — a heap of sand
  • seraphin — a silver coin which formed the principal currency of Goa in the 16th century
  • sheepman — a person engaged in the tending or breeding of sheep, especially the owner of a sheep ranch.
  • shrapnel — Military. a hollow projectile containing bullets or the like and a bursting charge, designed to explode before reaching the target, and to set free a shower of missiles. such projectiles collectively.
  • spanghew — to throw into the air
  • stanhopeJames, 1st Earl Stanhope, 1673–1721, British soldier and statesman: prime minister 1717–18.
  • stephane — an ancient Greek headdress or crown often depicted in the statuary of various deities
  • swamphen — any of several large Old World gallinules varying from purple to white, all possibly belonging to the single species Porphyrio porphyrio.
  • synaphea — a continuity of rhythm throughout a poem
  • thespian — (often lowercase) pertaining to tragedy or to the dramatic art in general.
  • unpathed — not having a path or paths
  • unphased — any of the major appearances or aspects in which a thing of varying modes or conditions manifests itself to the eye or mind.
  • unpreach — to retract or undo (preaching)
  • unshaped — not shaped or definitely formed.
  • unshapen — not shaped or definitely formed; shapeless; formless; indefinite.
  • wahpeton — a member of a North American Indian people belonging to the Santee branch of the Dakota.
  • xenophya — parts of a shell or skeleton formed by foreign bodies
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