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11-letter words containing r, e, a, c, h, i

  • escherichia — a genus of Gram-negative rodlike bacteria that are found in the intestines of humans and many animals, esp E. coli, which is sometimes pathogenic and is widely used in genetic research
  • eucharistic — (Theosophy) Pertaining to the Eucharist.
  • euchromatin — the part of a chromosome that constitutes the major genes and does not stain strongly with basic dyes when the cell is not dividing
  • farreaching — Alternative spelling of far-reaching.
  • feral child — a neglected child who engages in lawless or anti-social behaviour
  • firewatcher — A person who looks for the onset of fires, normally from a high vantage point.
  • franchisees — Plural form of franchisee.
  • franchisers — Plural form of franchiser.
  • francophile — friendly to or having a strong liking for France or the French.
  • freight car — any car for carrying freight.
  • ftp archive — archive site
  • germaphobic — Alternative form of germophobic.
  • graphicness — The quality of being graphic: grotesqueness or vividness.
  • hack writer — a writer of undistinguished literary work produced to order
  • hackberries — Plural form of hackberry.
  • haematocrit — Alternative spelling of hematocrit.
  • hair-curler — a cylindrical device, usually electronic and heated, used to curl the hair
  • hairy vetch — a plant, Vicia villosa, of the legume family, native to Eurasia, having hairy stems and violet and white flowers, widely grown as forage and as a cover crop.
  • hairy-faced — having a face covered with hair.
  • half-circle — one half of a circle
  • handicapper — Horse Racing. a racetrack official or employee who assigns the weight a horse must carry in a race. a person employed, as by a newspaper, to make predictions on the outcomes of horse races.
  • hard-ticket — a ticket entitling one to a reserved seat.
  • hardicanute — 1019?–42, king of Denmark 1035–42, king of England 1040–42 (son of Canute).
  • haruspicate — of or relating to a haruspex
  • head-strict — (theory)   A head-strict function will not necessarily evaluate every cons cell of its (list) argument, but whenever it does evaluate a cons cell it will also evaluate the element in the head of that cell. An example of a head-strict function is beforeZero :: [Int] -> [Int] beforeZero [] = [] beforeZero (0:xs) = [] beforeZero (x:xs) = x : beforeZero xs which returns a list up to the first zero. This pattern of evaluation is important because it is common in functions which operate on a list of inputs. See also tail-strict, hyperstrict.
  • heartaching — emotional pain or distress; sorrow; grief; anguish.
  • helicograph — an instrument for drawing helices.
  • hemeralopic — (medicine) Unable to see clearly in bright light; day-blind; suffering from hemeralopia.
  • hemicranial — Relating to hemicrania.
  • hemorrhagic — a profuse discharge of blood, as from a ruptured blood vessel; bleeding.
  • heptarchies — Plural form of heptarchy.
  • heptarchist — A ruler of one division of a heptarchy.
  • heracleides — ?390–?322 bc, Greek astronomer and philosopher: the first to state that the earth rotates on its axis
  • heraclitean — of or relating to Heraclitus or his philosophy.
  • hercegovina — Herzegovina.
  • heresiarchs — Plural form of heresiarch.
  • heretically — of, relating to, or characteristic of heretics or heresy.
  • hermit crab — any of numerous crabs, especially of the genera Pagurus and Eupagurus, that protect their soft uncovered abdomen by occupying the castoff shell of a univalve mollusk.
  • hetaerismic — of or relating to courtesans
  • hetairismic — relating to hetairism, concubinage
  • heteroscian — a name applied to the people who live in temperate zones, so given because in these areas shadows created by the sun at noon will fall in opposite directions
  • heterotaxic — of, relating to, or characterized by heterotaxis.
  • heuristical — Of or pertaining to heuristics.
  • hibernacula — Plural form of hibernaculum.
  • hierarchial — Alternative form of hierarchical.
  • hierarchies — any system of persons or things ranked one above another.
  • hierarchise — to arrange in a hierarchy.
  • hierarchism — hierarchical principles, rule, or influence.
  • hierarchist — hierarchical principles, rule, or influence.
  • hierarchize — to arrange in a hierarchy.
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