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14-letter words containing s, h, a, f, t

  • sportfisherman — a motorboat fitted out for sportfishing.
  • stand the gaff — harsh treatment or criticism: All the gaff he took never made him bitter.
  • stand-off half — a player who acts as a link between his scrum half and three-quarter backs
  • stomachfulness — the quality of being stomachful
  • straight fight — a contest between two candidates only
  • straight flush — a sequence of five consecutive cards of the same suit.
  • straight-faced — a serious or impassive facial expression that conceals one's true feelings about something, especially a desire to laugh.
  • teaching staff — those members of staff in a school, college, or university who teach
  • the federalist — a set of 85 articles by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay, published in 1787 and 1788, analyzing the Constitution of the U.S. and urging its adoption
  • the-federalist — a series of 85 essays (1787–88) by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay, written in support of the Constitution.
  • thick and fast — If things happen thick and fast, they happen very quickly and in large numbers.
  • thomas rafflesSir Thomas Stamford, 1781–1826, English colonial administrator in the East Indies.
  • traffic lights — a set of coloured lights placed at crossroads, junctions, etc, to control the flow of traffic
  • turn of phrase — expression, wording
  • unfaithfulness — not faithful; false to duty, obligation, or promises; faithless; disloyal.
  • unthankfulness — the quality or condition of being unthankful; lack of thankfulness; ungratefulness
  • unwatchfulness — the quality or state of being unwatchful
  • upwards of sth — A quantity that is upwards of a particular number is more than that number.
  • vote of thanks — A vote of thanks is an official speech in which the speaker formally thanks a person for doing something.
  • waltham forest — a borough of Greater London, England.
  • welfare rights — legal entitlements to financial and other benefits
  • x short of a y — If you say that someone is, for example, several cards short of a full deck or one sandwich short of a picnic, you think they are stupid, foolish, or crazy.
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