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10-letter words containing s, o, n, g, h

  • hostessing — a woman who receives and entertains guests in her own home or elsewhere.
  • hot spring — a thermal spring having water warmer than 98°F (37°C): the water is usually heated by emanation from or passage near hot or molten rock.
  • hothousing — Present participle of hothouse.
  • houselling — administration of the Eucharist
  • hypogenous — growing beneath, or on the undersurface, as fungi on leaves.
  • hypogynous — situated on the receptacle beneath the pistil and free of the ovary, as stamens, petals, or sepals.
  • ingenhousz — Jan (jɑn). 1730–99, Dutch plant physiologist and physician, who discovered photosynthesis
  • inholdings — Plural form of inholding.
  • long horse — vaulting horse.
  • long house — a communal dwelling, especially of the Iroquois and various other North American Indian peoples, consisting of a wooden, bark-covered framework often as much as 100 feet (30.5 meters) in length.
  • long johns — long underwear, especially for winter use.
  • longhouses — Plural form of longhouse.
  • mahoganies — Plural form of mahogany.
  • megaphones — Plural form of megaphone.
  • mesolonghi — Missolonghi.
  • monogamish — Mostly monogamous, but allowing for occasional infidelities.
  • monographs — Plural form of monograph.
  • moonlights — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of moonlight.
  • morphogens — Plural form of morphogen.
  • neighbours — Plural form of neighbour.
  • night soil — human excrement collected and used as fertilizer.
  • nightgowns — Plural form of nightgown.
  • nightscope — An optical instrument that provides night vision.
  • nightspots — Plural form of nightspot.
  • nomographs — Plural form of nomograph.
  • nonhousing — not concerned with or related to housing
  • nonsighted — having no eyesight; unsighted; blind.
  • nosography — the systematic description of diseases.
  • nothingism — a trivial thing or matter
  • nourishing — promoting or sustaining life, growth, or strength: a nourishing diet.
  • offshoring — the practice of moving employees or certain business activities to foreign countries as a way to lower costs, avoid taxes, etc.: the offshoring of software jobs to China.
  • ogden nashJohn, 1752–1835, English architect and city planner.
  • onslaughts — Plural form of onslaught.
  • open sight — (on a firearm) a rear sight consisting of a notch across which the gunner aligns the front sight on the target.
  • orphanages — Plural form of orphanage.
  • oughtlings — at all
  • outgushing — Present participle of outgush.
  • outshining — Present participle of outshine.
  • phlogiston — a nonexistent chemical that, prior to the discovery of oxygen, was thought to be released during combustion.
  • phosgenite — a mineral, lead chlorocarbonate, Pb 2 Cl 2 CO 3 , occurring in crystals.
  • phosphagen — a high-energy phosphoric ester that serves as a reservoir of phosphate-bond energy, as phosphocreatine in vertebrates and phosphoarginine in invertebrates.
  • psychogony — the development or origin of the soul or mind
  • push along — to go away
  • ring shout — a group dance of West African origin introduced into parts of the southern U.S. by black revivalists, performed by shuffling counterclockwise in a circle while answering shouts of a preacher with corresponding shouts, and held to be, in its vigorous antiphonal patterns, a source in the development of jazz.
  • ring-shout — a group dance of West African origin introduced into parts of the southern U.S. by black revivalists, performed by shuffling counterclockwise in a circle while answering shouts of a preacher with corresponding shouts, and held to be, in its vigorous antiphonal patterns, a source in the development of jazz.
  • rodfishing — angling or fishing using a fishing rod
  • rough spin — hard or unfair treatment
  • rough-sawn — (of wood) used as originally cut, without smoothing or sanding: shingles of rough-sawn cedar.
  • schizogony — (in the asexual reproduction of certain sporozoans) the multiple fission of a trophozoite or schizont into merozoites.
  • schoenberg — Arnold (ˈarnɔlt). 1874–1951, Austrian composer and musical theorist, in the US after 1933. The harmonic idiom of such early works as the string sextet Verklärte Nacht (1899) gave way to his development of atonality, as in the song cycle Pierrot Lunaire (1912), and later of the twelve-tone technique. He wrote many choral, orchestral, and chamber works and the unfinished opera Moses and Aaron
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