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11-letter words containing r, h, o

  • horse-trade — to bargain or trade shrewdly.
  • horselaughs — Plural form of horselaugh.
  • horseplayer — a habitual bettor on horse races.
  • horseracing — Alternative form of horse racing.
  • horseradish — a cultivated plant, Armoracia rusticana, of the mustard family, having small, white flowers.
  • horseriders — Plural form of horserider.
  • horsetrader — (literally) A person who buys and sells horses, especially one who makes such transactions in a clever or skillful manner.
  • hospitaller — a member of the religious and military order (Knights Hospitalers or Knights of St. John of Jerusalem) originating about the time of the first Crusade (1096–99) and taking its name from a hospital at Jerusalem.
  • host number — (networking)   The host part of an Internet address. The rest is the network number.
  • hot jupiter — any of a class of large, hot, gaseous planets similar to Jupiter in mass but outside our solar system.
  • hot springs — city in central Ark., adjoining a national park: the park has 47 hot mineral springs: pop. 36,000
  • hot working — Hot working is a process in which a metal is shaped under pressure at a fairly high temperature.
  • hotelkeeper — a manager or owner of a hotel.
  • hour circle — a great circle on the celestial sphere passing through the celestial poles and containing a point on the celestial sphere, as a star or the vernal equinox.
  • hourglasses — Plural form of hourglass.
  • house brand — a brand name used by a retailer for a product or product line made specifically for or by the retailer.
  • house group — a group of Christians who regularly meet to worship, study the Bible, etc, in someone's house
  • house organ — a periodical issued by a business or other establishment for its employees, customers, and other interested readers, presenting news about the firm, its products, and its personnel.
  • house owner — A house owner is a person who owns a house.
  • house party — the guests at such an affair or party: The house party goes sailing today.
  • house-craft — skill in domestic management
  • house-proud — taking pride in one's house and housekeeping.
  • house-train — to housebreak.
  • houseboater — One who lives in a houseboat.
  • housebreaks — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of housebreak.
  • housebroken — (of a pet) trained to avoid excreting inside the house or in improper places.
  • housefather — a man responsible for a group of young people, as students, living in a dormitory, hostel, etc.
  • householder — a person who holds title to or occupies a house.
  • householdry — (archaic) The management and upkeep of a household.
  • housekeeper — a person, often hired, who does or directs the domestic work and planning necessary for a home, as cleaning or buying food.
  • houselander — Caryll [kar-uh l] /ˈkær əl/ (Show IPA), 1901–54, English writer on Roman Catholicism.
  • housemaster — a man who is in charge of a house or a dormitory in a private school for boys.
  • housemother — a woman in charge of a residence, especially for children, students, or young women, who acts as hostess, chaperon, and occasionally as housekeeper.
  • houseparent — one of a married couple responsible for a group of young people, as students, living in a dormitory, hostel, etc., sometimes acting solely as an advisor, but often serving as host or hostess, chaperon, housekeeper, etc.
  • houseperson — someone who manages a household; househusband or housewife.
  • housesitter — Alternative spelling of house-sitter.
  • housewifery — the function or work of a housewife; housekeeping.
  • houseworker — a paid employee in a home, as a maid or cook.
  • hoverboards — Plural form of hoverboard.
  • hovercrafts — (nonstandard) Plural form of hovercraft.
  • howard mossHoward, 1922–1987, U.S. poet, editor, and playwright.
  • human error — sb's mistake
  • humoresques — Plural form of humoresque.
  • humorlessly — a comic, absurd, or incongruous quality causing amusement: the humor of a situation.
  • humouristic — Alternative spelling of humoristic.
  • humourously — (UK, uncommon, nonstandard) alternative spelling of humorously.
  • hundredfold — a hundred times as great or as much.
  • hunker down — to squat on one's heels (often followed by down).
  • hurry along — rush, go quickly
  • hyalography — the technique of writing or engraving on glass.
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