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11-letter words containing r, e, a, h, o

  • orchestrina — (musical instruments) orchestrion.
  • orthoborate — (inorganic chemistry) Any anion derived from orthoboric acid; any salt containing this anion.
  • orthoclases — Plural form of orthoclase.
  • orthopaedic — of or relating to orthopedics.
  • orthopteran — orthopterous.
  • orthostates — orthostat.
  • osteography — The scientific description of bones; osteology.
  • ostreophage — someone who loves or eats oysters
  • ostreophagy — the consumption of oysters
  • other ranks — (in the armed forces) all those who do not hold a commissioned rank
  • other woman — a woman who is romantically or sexually involved with another woman's husband or lover, especially a woman who is having an affair with a married man.
  • outreaching — Present participle of outreach.
  • over-handle — a part of a thing made specifically to be grasped or held by the hand.
  • over-sharer — an instance of this: Get ready for an overshare about his health problems.
  • overachieve — to perform, especially academically, above the potential indicated by tests of one's mental ability or aptitude.
  • overarching — forming an arch above: great trees with overarching branches.
  • overcharged — Simple past tense and past participle of overcharge.
  • overcharges — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of overcharge.
  • overdraught — (chiefly, British) An overdraft.
  • overfraught — too fraught
  • overhanging — extending or dangling
  • overharvest — the harvesting of plants or animals in an unsustainable manner
  • overhastily — in such a way as to be excessively hasty or done without enough consideration
  • overheating — heating (something) excessively
  • overleather — the upper part of a shoe
  • overreacher — to reach or extend over or beyond: The shelf overreached the nook and had to be planed down.
  • overweather — to expose too long to harsh weather
  • paedotrophy — the art of raising children
  • paint horse — paint (def 6).
  • paleography — ancient forms of writing, as in documents and inscriptions.
  • panchreston — a proposed explanation intended to address a complex problem by trying to account for all possible contingencies but typically proving to be too broadly conceived and therefore oversimplified to be of any practical use.
  • paranephros — the adrenal gland
  • parishioner — one of the community or inhabitants of a parish.
  • pea-shooter — a tube through which dried peas, beans, or small pellets are blown, used as a toy.
  • pechora sea — the SE part of the Barents Sea, northwest of Russia
  • pelotherapy — the application of mud to the body for therapeutic purposes
  • pentahedron — a solid figure having five faces.
  • perchlorate — a salt or ester of perchloric acid, as potassium perchlorate, KClO 4 .
  • perth amboy — a seaport in E New Jersey.
  • petrography — the branch of petrology dealing with the description and classification of rocks, especially by microscopic examination.
  • phanerogams — any of the Phanerogamia, a former primary division of plants comprising those having reproductive organs; a flowering plant or seed plant (opposed to cryptogam).
  • phanerozoic — the eon comprising the Paleozoic, Mesozoic, and Cenozoic eras.
  • phlebograph — an instrument for recording the venous pulse.
  • phosphorate — Also, phosphorize. Chemistry. to combine or impregnate with phosphorus.
  • phrase book — a small book containing everyday phrases and sentences and their equivalents in a foreign language, written especially for travelers.
  • phraseogram — a written symbol or combination of symbols, as in shorthand, used to represent a phrase.
  • phraseology — manner or style of verbal expression; characteristic language: legal phraseology.
  • physiolater — somebody who worships nature
  • placeholder — Mathematics, Logic. a symbol in an expression that may be replaced by the name of any element of the set.
  • planthopper — any member of a large and varied group of homopterous insects that are related to the leafhoppers and the spittlebugs but rarely damage cultivated plants.
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