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10-letter words containing p, h, a, r, m

  • hemipteran — hemipterous.
  • hemitropal — hemitropous
  • heptameron — A literary work whose action covers a period of seven days.
  • heptameter — a verse of seven metrical feet.
  • hermatypic — reef-building coral.
  • home scrap — scrap steel reprocessed in the steel mill in which it was produced.
  • homographs — a word of the same written form as another but of different meaning and usually origin, whether pronounced the same way or not, as bear 1 “to carry; support” and bear 2 “animal” or lead 1 “to conduct” and lead 2 “metal.”.
  • homography — The state or quality of being spelt homographically; the state or quality of existing as homographs.
  • homopteran — homopterous.
  • honor camp — a prison work camp operating on an honor system.
  • hyperaemia — an abnormally large amount of blood in any part of the body.
  • hypermania — excessive excitement or enthusiasm; craze: The country has a mania for soccer.
  • hypermanic — pertaining to or affected by mania.
  • hypermedia — hypertext
  • hyperosmia — an abnormally acute sense of smell.
  • hypnodrama — the acting out of a traumatic experience, under hypnosis, by a person undergoing psychotherapy.
  • hypodermal — Zoology. an underlayer of epithelial cells in arthropods and certain other invertebrates that secretes substances for the overlying cuticle or exoskeleton.
  • hypometria — Dysmetria in which the patient tends to undershoot the intended target.
  • hyporchema — a lively choral ode sung in ancient Greece in honor of Apollo or Dionysus.
  • jamshedpur — a city in SE Jharkhand, in NE India.
  • karyolymph — The liquid part of the nucleus of a cell.
  • kymographs — Plural form of kymograph.
  • kymography — The use of a kymograph.
  • lagomorphs — Plural form of lagomorph.
  • lampholder — a fixture for an electric light bulb
  • lymphogram — A diagnostic image produced by lymphography.
  • macphersonJames, 1736–96, Scottish author and translator.
  • macrograph — a representation of an object that is of the same size as or larger than the object.
  • macrophage — a large white blood cell, occurring principally in connective tissue and in the bloodstream, that ingests foreign particles and infectious microorganisms by phagocytosis.
  • macrophyte — a plant, especially a marine plant, large enough to be visible to the naked eye.
  • mammograph — A machine for taking X-ray pictures of the breasts (mammaries).
  • march past — a parade or procession, especially of troops past a reviewing stand.
  • march-past — a parade or procession, especially of troops past a reviewing stand.
  • mareograph — marigraph.
  • marigraphs — Plural form of marigraph.
  • marsh pink — any of several eastern North American plants belonging to the genus Sabatia, of the gentian family, having rose-pink flowers.
  • mastership — the office, function, or authority of a master.
  • metaphoric — a figure of speech in which a term or phrase is applied to something to which it is not literally applicable in order to suggest a resemblance, as in “A mighty fortress is our God.”. Compare mixed metaphor, simile (def 1).
  • metaphrase — a literal translation.
  • metaphrast — a person who translates or changes a literary work from one form to another, as prose into verse.
  • micrograph — an instrument for executing extremely minute writing or engraving.
  • microphage — a small phagocytic cell in blood or lymph, especially a polymorphonuclear leukocyte.
  • mimeograph — a printing machine with an ink-fed drum, around which a cut waxed stencil is placed and which rotates as successive sheets of paper are fed into it.
  • mimography — the representation of sign language in writing
  • monographs — Plural form of monograph.
  • monography — A monograph.
  • morphactin — any of various synthetic compounds, derived from fluorine and carboxylic acid, that regulate the growth and development of plants.
  • mouth harp — harmonica (def 1).
  • mouthparts — Plural form of mouthpart.
  • myoatrophy — atrophy of muscle.
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