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11-letter words containing s, h, e, a, r, l

  • ecclesiarch — a sacristan, especially of a monastery.
  • establisher — A person who establishes something.
  • estranghelo — an archaic, cursive form of the Syriac alphabet
  • exhilarates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of exhilarate.
  • fatherlands — Plural form of fatherland.
  • featherless — Having no feathers.
  • fish ladder — a series of ascending pools constructed to enable salmon or other fish to swim upstream around or over a dam.
  • flash drive — Also called flash memory drive, thumb drive, USB drive. a very small, portable, solid-state hard drive that can be inserted into a USB port for storage and retrieval of data.
  • flash eprom — Flash Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory
  • flash meter — a meter that measures the light emitted by a flash unit
  • flashpacker — a backpacker who has a considerable disposable income
  • flowerheads — Plural form of flowerhead.
  • flycatchers — Plural form of flycatcher.
  • gas lighter — device: produces flame
  • generalship — skill as commander of a large military force or unit.
  • goldthreads — Plural form of goldthread.
  • green flash — a green coloration of the upper portion of the sun, caused by atmospheric refraction and occasionally seen as the sun rises above or sinks below the horizon.
  • gullywasher — a usually short, heavy rainstorm.
  • halberdiers — Plural form of halberdier.
  • halberstadt — a town in central Germany, in Saxony-Anhalt: industrial centre noted for its historic buildings. Pop: 40 014 (2003 est)
  • half sister — sister (def 2).
  • half-sister — sister (def 2).
  • hammerlocks — Plural form of hammerlock.
  • harbor seal — a small, spotted seal, Phoca vitulina, of the Atlantic coasts of North America and Europe and the Pacific coast of northern North America.
  • harbourless — Without a harbour.
  • harmfulness — causing or capable of causing harm; injurious: a harmful idea; a harmful habit.
  • harvest fly — cicada
  • harvestable — Also, harvesting. the gathering of crops.
  • hassle-free — without problems or bother
  • hawser-laid — cablelaid (def 1).
  • hazel crest — a town in NE Illinois.
  • health risk — something that could cause harm to people's health
  • heart shell — any of numerous bivalve mollusks, especially of the families Cardiidae and Carditidae, having a heart-shaped shell.
  • heartlessly — unfeeling; unkind; unsympathetic; harsh; cruel: heartless words; a heartless ruler.
  • heel breast — the forward side of the heel, adjoining the shank of a shoe.
  • heliographs — Plural form of heliograph.
  • hell-raiser — a person who behaves in a rowdy, riotous manner, especially habitually.
  • henry's law — the principle that at a constant temperature the concentration of a gas dissolved in a fluid with which it does not combine chemically is almost directly proportional to the partial pressure of the gas at the surface of the fluid.
  • heracleides — ?390–?322 bc, Greek astronomer and philosopher: the first to state that the earth rotates on its axis
  • heteroplasm — (pathology) Tissue growing in a part of the body where it does not normally occur.
  • heuristical — Of or pertaining to heuristics.
  • highlanders — Plural form of highlander.
  • hinderlands — the buttocks
  • hinterlands — Plural form of hinterland.
  • holophrases — a word functioning as a phrase or sentence, as the imperative Go!
  • horn clause — (logic)   A set of atomic literals with at most one positive literal. Usually written L <- L1, ..., Ln or <- L1, ..., Ln where n>=0, "<-" means "is implied by" and comma stands for conjuction ("AND"). If L is false the clause is regarded as a goal. Horn clauses can express a subset of statements of first order logic. The name "Horn Clause" comes from the logician Alfred Horn, who first pointed out the significance of such clauses in 1951, in the article "On sentences which are true of direct unions of algebras", Journal of Symbolic Logic, 16, 14-21. A definite clause is a Horn clause that has exactly one positive literal.
  • horse laugh — a loud, coarse laugh, especially of derision.
  • horselaughs — Plural form of horselaugh.
  • horseplayer — a habitual bettor on horse races.
  • 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.
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