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9-letter words containing r, h, e, o

  • shoreless — limitless; boundless.
  • shoreline — the line where shore and water meet.
  • shoreside — land along a shore.
  • shoreview — a town in E Minnesota.
  • shoreward — Also, shorewards. toward the shore or land.
  • shoreweed — a tufty aquatic perennial, Littorella uniflora, of the plantain family, that forms underwater mats but usually flowers only on muddy margins
  • shorewood — a city in SE Wisconsin, near Milwaukee.
  • short leg — a fielding position on the leg side near the batsman's wicket
  • shortcake — a cake made with a relatively large amount of butter or other shortening.
  • shorthead — a brachycephalic person.
  • shortness — having little length; not long.
  • shortwave — Electricity. a radio wave, shorter than that used in AM broadcasting, corresponding to frequencies of over 1600 kilohertz: used for long-distance reception or transmission.
  • shotfirer — a person employed to detonate an explosive
  • shotmaker — a sports player delivering good shots
  • showbread — the 12 loaves of bread placed every Sabbath on a table in the sanctuary of the Biblical tabernacle and the Temple in Jerusalem as an offering by the priests to God. Ex. 25:30; Lev. 24:5–9.
  • showerful — abundant
  • shroffage — the commission charged by a money dealer
  • smasheroo — a popular success
  • smotherer — a person or thing that smothers
  • somewhere — in or at some place not specified, determined, or known: They live somewhere in Michigan.
  • sophister — a specious, unsound, or fallacious reasoner.
  • sophomore — a student in the second year of high school or college.
  • sore shin — a disease of plant seedlings, characterized by stem cankers that girdle the stem near the soil line, caused by any of several fungi, especially Rhizoctonia solani.
  • southerly — a wind that blows from the south.
  • sticheron — a liturgical hymn sung in the Orthodox Church
  • stomacher — a richly ornamented garment covering the stomach and chest, worn by both sexes in the 15th and 16th centuries, and later worn under a bodice by women.
  • storeship — a government-owned ship that carries supplies to a naval fleet
  • stourhead — a Palladian mansion near Mere in Wiltshire: built (1722) for Henry Hoare; famous for its landscaped gardens laid out (1741) by Flitcroft
  • studhorse — a stallion kept for breeding.
  • superhero — a hero, especially in children's comic books and television cartoons, possessing extraordinary, often magical powers.
  • supershow — an exceptional show
  • tephroite — a mineral, silicate of manganese, Mn 2 SiO 4 , occurring in orthorhombic crystals.
  • ter borch — Gerard [kh-ey-rahrt] /xˈeɪ rɑrt/ (Show IPA), 1617–81, Dutch painter.
  • the bronxthe, a borough of New York City, N of Manhattan. 43.4 sq. mi. (112 sq. km).
  • the cross — the cross on which Jesus was put to death
  • the crowd — the common people; the masses
  • the force — A data parallel language by Harry Jordan <[email protected]> which extends Fortran for shared memory multiprocessors. It features parallel "case" statements and critical sections.
  • the forum — the main forum of ancient Rome, situated between the Capitoline and the Palatine Hills
  • the gower — a peninsula in S Wales, in Swansea county on the Bristol Channel: mainly agricultural with several resorts
  • the lords — the House of Lords in the British Parliament
  • the norse — the Norwegians
  • the north — any area lying in or towards the north
  • the order — the dress, equipment, or formation directed for a particular purpose or undertaking
  • the other — the remaining (one or ones in a group of which one or some have been specified)
  • the roost — a powerful current caused by conflicting tides around the Shetland and Orkney Islands
  • the ropes — the fence made of rope that is around the edge of the area where a boxing or wrestling match takes place
  • the rough — the part of the course bordering the fairways where the grass is untrimmed
  • the score — the actual situation; the true facts
  • the sword — violence, warfare
  • the trots — diarrhoea
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