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11-letter words containing r, h, o

  • disharmonic — lacking harmony; disharmonious; discordant.
  • dishonorary — tending to dishonour or disgrace
  • dishonoring — Present participle of dishonor.
  • dishonoured — Simple past tense and past participle of dishonour.
  • dishonourer — One who dishonours.
  • disk harrow — a harrow having a number of sharp-edged, concave disks set at such an angle that as the harrow is drawn along the ground they turn the soil, pulverize it, and destroy weeds.
  • diskography — discography.
  • disthronize — to dethrone
  • dittography — reduplication of letters or syllables in writing, printing, etc., usually through error.
  • do a perish — to die or come near to dying of thirst or starvation
  • do honor to — to show great respect for
  • do up right — to do carefully or thoroughly
  • dog handler — a member of the police force, a security organization, etc, who works in collaboration with a specially trained dog
  • dog-catcher — a person employed by a municipal pound, humane society, or the like, to find and impound stray or homeless dogs, cats, etc.
  • dogcatchers — Plural form of dogcatcher.
  • door charge — an entrance fee.
  • door handle — doorknob.
  • dope pusher — pusher (def 2).
  • dorset horn — one of an English breed of sheep having a close-textured, medium-length wool.
  • dorsetshire — a county in S England. 1024 sq. mi. (2650 sq. km).
  • dower chest — a Pennsylvania Dutch hope chest bearing the initials of the owner.
  • dower house — the dwelling that is intended for or occupied by the widowed mother of the owner of an ancestral estate.
  • downdraught — Alternative spelling of downdraft.
  • downhearted — dejected; depressed; discouraged.
  • downlighter — Downlight.
  • doxographer — a person who collects the opinions and conjectures of ancient Greek philosophers
  • dr. zhivago — a novel (1958) by Boris Pasternak.
  • drag anchor — (of a vessel) to move away from its mooring because the anchor has failed to hold
  • drag harrow — a type of harrow consisting of heavy beams, often with spikes inserted, used to crush clods, level soil, or prepare seedbeds
  • dragon-head — dragonhead.
  • dreadnought — a type of battleship armed with heavy-caliber guns in turrets: so called from the British battleship Dreadnought, launched in 1906, the first of its type.
  • dress shoes — formal shoes for wearing with evening dress
  • dromophobia — an irrational fear of crossing roads
  • dronishness — the quality or capacity to drone
  • droolworthy — inspiring or likely to inspire excessive enthusiasm or pleasure; extremely attractive or desirable
  • drop a hint — If you drop a hint, you give a hint or say something in a casual way.
  • drop anchor — secure a ship in place
  • drop behind — a small quantity of liquid that falls or is produced in a more or less spherical mass; a liquid globule.
  • drop hammer — drop forge.
  • drosophilas — Plural form of drosophila.
  • drouthiness — the state or condition of being thirsty or dry
  • dry shampoo — a product in powder or spray form that you can use to clean hair without wetting it
  • dwarf shoot — a very thin lateral branch in certain trees.
  • dynamograph — a device for registering the quantity of force applied
  • dysharmonic — relating to abnormal bone development
  • dyshidrosis — (medicine) A skin condition characterized by small blisters on the hands or feet.
  • dystrophies — Plural form of dystrophy.
  • earth lodge — a circular, usually dome-shaped dwelling of certain North American Indians, made of posts and beams covered variously with branches, grass, sod, or earth and having a central opening in the roof, a tamped earth floor, and frequently a vestibule.
  • earth mover — a vehicle, as a bulldozer, for pushing or carrying excavated earth from place to place.
  • earth smoke — fumitory.
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