0%

10-letter words containing r, h, u, m

  • haustorium — a projection from the hypha of a fungus into the organic matter from which it absorbs nutrients.
  • hemelytrum — the anterior wing of some insects such as earwigs
  • herbariums — Plural form of herbarium.
  • hexamerous — consisting of or divided into six parts.
  • hieronymus — Eusebius [yoo-see-bee-uh s] /yuˈsi bi əs/ (Show IPA), Jerome, Saint.
  • home guard — a volunteer force used for meeting local emergencies when the regular armed forces are needed elsewhere.
  • home ruler — an advocate of home rule.
  • home truth — an indisputable fact or basic truth, especially one whose accuracy may cause discomfort or embarrassment.
  • homebuyers — Plural form of homebuyer.
  • homuncular — an artificially made dwarf, supposedly produced in a flask by an alchemist.
  • honorarium — a payment in recognition of acts or professional services for which custom or propriety forbids a price to be set: The mayor was given a modest honorarium for delivering a speech to our club.
  • horologium — a building supporting or containing a timepiece, as a clock tower.
  • hot number — sth popular
  • house mark — a trademark that appears on and identifies all of a company's products.
  • housemaker — Homemaker.
  • human race — humanity, humans as a species
  • humaniform — Like a human or that of a human in form, seeming, or appearance.
  • humberside — a county in NE England. 1356 sq. mi. (3525 sq. km).
  • humblebrag — a statement intended as a boast or brag but disguised by a humble apology, complaint, etc.
  • humbuggery — pretense; sham.
  • humdingers — Plural form of humdinger.
  • humgruffin — a terrible or repulsive person
  • humidifier — a device for increasing the amount of water vapor in the air of a room or building, consisting of a container for water and a vaporizer.
  • humiliator — to cause (a person) a painful loss of pride, self-respect, or dignity; mortify.
  • humoralism — a theory of the composition and workings of the human body, based on the idea that it was filled with four basic substances, or humours, adopted by Greek and Roman physicians and philosophers.
  • humoralist — a person who believes in humoralism
  • humoresque — a musical composition of humorous or capricious character.
  • humoristic — a person who is skillful in the use of humor, as in writing, talking, or acting.
  • humorously — characterized by humor; funny; comical: a humorous anecdote.
  • humouredly — (only in combination with good, bad or ill) In the manner of a specified kind of humour. See good-humouredly, bad-humouredly, ill-humouredly.
  • humourless — (British spelling, Canadian) alternative spelling of humorless.
  • humoursome — (archaic) Liable to humours or moods; fickle; ill-tempered.
  • huntmaster — (chiefly, fantasy) The leader of a hunt.
  • hydromulch — to spread mulch on (a field, garden, etc.) in a stream of water propelled through a hose.
  • ill humour — a disagreeable or sullen mood; bad temper
  • infrahuman — less than human; subhuman.
  • interhuman — of, pertaining to, characteristic of, or having the nature of people: human frailty.
  • jamshedpur — a city in SE Jharkhand, in NE India.
  • khidmutgar — a male servant, esp one who serves at table
  • khitmutgar — (in India) a waiter.
  • kremenchug — a city in central Ukraine, on the Dnieper River.
  • kremenchuk — a city in central Ukraine, on the Dnieper River.
  • krummhorns — Plural form of krummhorn.
  • largemouth — Applied to various kinds of fish characterized by a large mouth.
  • leverhulmeViscount (William Hesketh Lever) 1851–1925, English soap manufacturer, originator of an employee profit-sharing plan, and founder of a model industrial town.
  • lukewarmth — lukewarmness
  • lumen-hour — a unit of luminous energy, equal to that emitted in 1 hour by a light source emitting a luminous flux of 1 lumen. Abbreviation: lm-hr.
  • lunchrooms — Plural form of lunchroom.
  • malnourish — Lb transitive To feed insufficiently, to cause malnutrition.
  • manchurian — a historic region in NE China: ancestral home of the Manchu. About 413,000 sq. mi. (1,070,000 sq. km).
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?