11-letter words containing r, o, b, h, e, l
- hyperbolism — the use of hyperbole.
- hyperbolist — One who uses hyperbole; an exaggerator.
- hyperbolize — to use hyperbole; exaggerate.
- hyperboloid — a quadric surface having a finite center and some of its plane sections hyperbolas. Equation: x 2 / a 2 + y 2 / b 2 − z 2 / c 2 = 1.
- hyperboreal — Hyperborean.
- lay brother — a man who has taken religious vows and habit but is employed by his order chiefly in manual labor.
- limber hole — any of a series of holes pierced through a frame or floor to allow the passage of accumulated moisture.
- lochaber ax — a Scottish battle-ax of the 16th century, having a tall, cleaverlike blade with a hook at its upper end.
- melon shrub — pepino (def 2).
- neighbourly — (British, Canada) Showing the qualities of a friendly and helpful neighbour.
- nourishable — able to be nourished; benefiting from nourishment
- phlebograph — an instrument for recording the venous pulse.
- rabbit hole — opening of a rabbit's burrow
- rhabdocoele — any member of the turbellarian flatworm order Neorhabdocoela, comprising both freshwater and marine species, having a simple saclike digestive system.
- shovelboard — the game of shuffleboard.
- subchloride — a chloride containing a relatively small proportion of chlorine, as mercurous chloride.
- the gorbals — a district of Glasgow, formerly known for its slums
- thunderbolt — a flash of lightning with the accompanying thunder.
- toghril beg — ?990–1063 ad, Sultan of Turkey (1055–63), who founded the Seljuq dynasty and conquered Baghdad (1055)
- troubleshot — to act or be employed as a troubleshooter: She troubleshoots for a large industrial firm.
- unbrotherly — not brotherly
- wheelbarrow — a frame or box for conveying a load, supported at one end by a wheel or wheels, and lifted and pushed at the other by two horizontal shafts.
- willow herb — any of numerous plants belonging to the genus Epilobium, of the evening primrose family, having terminal clusters of purplish or white flowers.
- worshipable — Capable of being worshiped; worthy of veneration.