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

  • cheval screen — a fire screen, usually with a cloth panel, having supports at the ends and mounted on legs.
  • childrenswear — clothing for children
  • chlamydospore — a thick-walled asexual spore of many fungi: capable of surviving adverse conditions
  • cholesteremia — cholesterolemia.
  • chorepiscopal — (in early Christianity) relating to or connected with a local bishop
  • choripetalous — polypetalous
  • christianlike — like or befitting a Christian.
  • class teacher — a teacher who teaches a class
  • claustrophobe — a person who suffers from claustrophobia.
  • clear-sighted — If you describe someone as clear-sighted, you admire them because they are able to understand situations well and to make sensible judgments and decisions about them.
  • clearinghouse — If an organization acts as a clearinghouse, it collects, sorts, and distributes specialized information.
  • clishmaclaver — idle talk; gossip
  • close harmony — a type of singing in which all the parts except the bass lie close together and are confined to the compass of a tenth
  • coachbuilders — Plural form of coachbuilder.
  • cradle scythe — cradle (def 4b).
  • cross-channel — Cross-Channel travel is travel across the English Channel, especially by boat.
  • culture clash — a conflict arising from the interaction of people with different cultural values
  • das rheingold — an opera by Wagner (1869), one of four in a cycle based on the German myth of the Ring of the Nibelung
  • dischargeable — to relieve of a charge or load; unload: to discharge a ship.
  • disenthralled — to free from bondage; liberate: to be disenthralled from morbid fantasies.
  • dishonourable — showing lack of honor or integrity; ignoble; base; disgraceful; shameful: Cheating is dishonorable.
  • disinthralled — freed from thraldom
  • dysmenorrheal — painful menstruation.
  • early english — pertaining to the first style of Gothic architecture in England, ending in the latter half of the 13th century, characterized by the use of lancet arches, plate tracery, and narrow openings.
  • elasmobranchs — Plural form of elasmobranch.
  • electrographs — Plural form of electrograph.
  • elephantbirds — Plural form of elephantbird.
  • elevator shoe — a shoe designed to increase the wearer's height
  • ephemeralness — The quality of being ephemeral or transitory.
  • erythroblasts — Plural form of erythroblast.
  • eucharistical — Alternative form of eucharistic.
  • exhilarations — Plural form of exhilaration.
  • false bulrush — a tall reedlike marsh plant, Typha latifolia, with straplike leaves and flowers in long brown sausage-shaped spikes: family Typhaceae
  • false horizon — a line or plane that simulates the horizon, used in altitude-measuring devices or the like.
  • false-hearted — having a false or treacherous heart; deceitful; perfidious.
  • father lasher — a large sea scorpion, Myoxocephalus scorpius, occurring in British and European coastal waters
  • field marshal — an officer of the highest military rank in the British and certain other armies, and of the second highest rank in the French army.
  • filmographies — Plural form of filmography.
  • flamethrowers — Plural form of flamethrower.
  • flash picture — a photograph made using flash photography.
  • flowering ash — a variety of ash tree that produces conspicuous flowers
  • fly fisherman — one who fishes by fly-casting
  • foolhardiness — recklessly or thoughtlessly bold; foolishly rash or venturesome.
  • galerie house — (in French Louisiana) a house with its main story above the ground floor and with verandas (galeries) for both stories in tiers on at least one side.
  • galois theory — the branch of mathematics that deals with the application of the theory of finite groups to the solution of algebraic equations.
  • ghettoblaster — Alternative form of ghetto blaster.
  • global search — a word-processing operation in which a complete computer file or set of files is searched for every occurrence of a particular word or other sequence of characters
  • glossographer — a glossator.
  • grave clothes — the wrappings in which a dead body is interred
  • gresham's law — the tendency of the inferior of two forms of currency to circulate more freely than, or to the exclusion of, the superior, because of the hoarding of the latter.
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