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13-letter words containing r, i, g, h, t, s

  • taphrogenesis — the process of forming rifts, resulting in regional faulting and subsidence
  • thaumaturgist — a worker of wonders or miracles; magician.
  • thermogenesis — the production of heat, especially in an animal body by physiological processes.
  • thermosetting — pertaining to a type of plastic, as the urea resins, that sets when heated and cannot be remolded.
  • thermostating — a device, including a relay actuated by thermal conduction or convection, that functions to establish and maintain a desired temperature automatically or signals a change in temperature for manual adjustment.
  • thigh-slapper — a very funny joke, remark, story, or incident.
  • thigmotropism — oriented growth of an organism in response to mechanical contact, as a plant tendril coiling around a string support.
  • thin register — head register.
  • thrillingness — the state or quality of being thrilling or exciting
  • timothy grass — a coarse grass, Phleum pratense, having cylindrical spikes, used as fodder.
  • toothbrushing — the act or method of cleaning the teeth with a toothbrush.
  • tracking shot — dolly shot.
  • training ship — a ship equipped for training novices in seamanship, as for naval service.
  • training shoe — Training shoes are the same as trainers.
  • transshipping — to transfer from one ship, truck, freight car, or other conveyance to another.
  • trash farming — cultivation by leaving stubble, etc, on the surface of the soil to serve as a mulch
  • trash-talking — disparaging or boastful language used especially to demoralize or intimidate opponents: trash-talking in the locker room.
  • trout fishing — angling to catch trout
  • ultrarightist — ultraright.
  • uprighteously — in an upright or moral manner
  • voting rights — the entitlement of an individual to vote
  • weightlifters — Plural form of weightlifter.
  • welterweights — Plural form of welterweight.
  • whitlow grass — any of various plants of the genera Draba and Erophila, once thought to cure whitlows: family Brassicaceae (crucifers)
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