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11-letter words containing s, o, r, e, t, h

  • honeyeaters — Plural form of honeyeater.
  • horse-trade — to bargain or trade shrewdly.
  • horsetrader — (literally) A person who buys and sells horses, especially one who makes such transactions in a clever or skillful manner.
  • 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.
  • host number — (networking)   The host part of an Internet address. The rest is the network number.
  • house party — the guests at such an affair or party: The house party goes sailing today.
  • house-craft — skill in domestic management
  • house-train — to housebreak.
  • houseboater — One who lives in a houseboat.
  • housefather — a man responsible for a group of young people, as students, living in a dormitory, hostel, etc.
  • housemaster — a man who is in charge of a house or a dormitory in a private school for boys.
  • housemother — a woman in charge of a residence, especially for children, students, or young women, who acts as hostess, chaperon, and occasionally as housekeeper.
  • houseparent — one of a married couple responsible for a group of young people, as students, living in a dormitory, hostel, etc., sometimes acting solely as an advisor, but often serving as host or hostess, chaperon, housekeeper, etc.
  • housesitter — Alternative spelling of house-sitter.
  • hovercrafts — (nonstandard) Plural form of hovercraft.
  • hydrolysate — any compound formed by hydrolysis.
  • hydrometers — Plural form of hydrometer.
  • hydrophytes — Plural form of hydrophyte.
  • hygrometers — Plural form of hygrometer.
  • hygrophytes — Plural form of hygrophyte.
  • hyperbolist — One who uses hyperbole; an exaggerator.
  • hypocenters — Plural form of hypocenter.
  • hypocretins — Plural form of hypocretin.
  • hypostrophe — the achievement of a patient turning himself or herself over
  • hypsometers — Plural form of hypsometer.
  • hypsometric — Of or relating to the use of the hypsometer; hypsographic.
  • hysterology — (obsolete) A scientific study, or treatise on the uterus.
  • hysterotomy — the operation of cutting into the uterus, as in a Cesarean.
  • interschool — Occurring or taking place between two or more schools.
  • isallotherm — a line on a weather map or chart connecting points having equal temperature variations within a given period of time.
  • isogeotherm — an imaginary line connecting all points within the earth having the same mean temperature.
  • john sutterJohn Augustus, 1803–80, U.S. frontiersman: owner of Sutter's Mill.
  • joshua tree — an evergreen tree, Yucca brevifolia, growing in arid or desert regions of the southwestern U.S., having long, twisted branches.
  • kosher salt — a coarse-grained salt with no additives, used especially to draw out the blood from meat to make it kosher.
  • lethiferous — lethal.
  • light horse — cavalry carrying light arms and equipment.
  • lithosphere — the solid portion of the earth (distinguished from atmosphere, hydrosphere).
  • lower sixth — the first year of the sixth form
  • lythraceous — belonging to the Lythraceae, the loosestrife family of plants.
  • macrophytes — Plural form of macrophyte.
  • mesotherapy — a cosmetic procedure in which minute doses of medication, vitamins, etc, are injected repeatedly into the mesodermal tissue under the skin to promote fat loss
  • mesothorium — one of two radioactive decay products of thorium, an isotope of radium or actinium.
  • mesotrophic — (of freshwater lakes) containing medium levels of nutrients
  • metachrosis — the ability of some animals, such as chameleons, to change their colour
  • metanephros — one of the three embryonic excretory organs of higher vertebrates, becoming the permanent and functional kidney.
  • metaphorist — a creator or user of metaphors
  • microphytes — Plural form of microphyte.
  • misanthrope — a comedy (1666) by Molière.
  • monostrophe — a poem in which all the strophes or stanzas are of the same metrical form.
  • mother ship — a vessel or craft that services others operating far from a home port or center.
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