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10-letter words containing s, o, t, h, e

  • the horses — gambling linked to horse racing
  • the hounds — a pack of foxhounds, etc
  • the majors — the major leagues
  • the minors — the minor leagues, esp. in baseball
  • the movies — the cinema
  • the others — the remaining ones (of a group)
  • the scotch — the Scottish people
  • the solent — a strait of the English Channel between the coast of Hampshire, on the English mainland, and the Isle of Wight. Width: up to 6 km (4 miles)
  • the-clouds — a comedy (423 b.c.) by Aristophanes.
  • theme song — a melody in an operetta or musical comedy so emphasized by repetition as to dominate the presentation.
  • theocritus — flourished c270 b.c, Greek poet.
  • theodosian — of or relating to Theodosius I, who made Christianity the official state religion of the Roman Empire.
  • theodosius — a.d. 401–450, emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire 408–450.
  • theonomous — the state of an individual or society that regards its own nature and norms as being in accord with the divine nature.
  • theophilus — a walled plain in the 4th quadrant of the face of the moon: about 65 miles (105 km) in diameter.
  • theopneust — inspired by God or a god
  • theoretics — the theoretical or speculative part of a science or subject.
  • thermistor — a resistor whose action depends upon changes of its resistance material with changes in temperature.
  • thermostat — a device, including a relay actuated by thermal conduction or convection, that functions to establish and maintain a desired temperature automatically or signals a change in temperature for manual adjustment.
  • thermotics — the scientific study of heat
  • thesprotia — an ancient coastal district in SW Epirus.
  • thimerosal — a cream-colored, crystalline, water-soluble powder, C 9 H 9 HgNaO 2 S, used chiefly as an antiseptic.
  • thothmes-i — flourished c1500 b.c, Egyptian ruler.
  • thotmes ii — flourished c1495 b.c, Egyptian ruler, son of Thutmose I, half brother of Thutmose III.
  • three-spot — a playing card, an upward face of a die, or a domino half bearing three pips.
  • threescore — being or containing three times twenty; sixty.
  • thresh out — to beat soundly in punishment; flog.
  • thrombosed — affected with a thrombus or blood clot
  • thunderous — producing thunder or a loud noise like thunder: thunderous applause.
  • thutmose i — flourished c1500 b.c, Egyptian ruler.
  • tied house — a public house or tavern owned by or under contract to a brewery whose brands of beer, ale, etc., it sells exclusively.
  • timoshenko — Semion Konstantinovich [syi-myawn ken-stuhn-tyee-nuh-vyich] /syɪˈmyɔn kɛn stʌnˈtyi nə vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1895–1970, Russian general.
  • tocherless — without dowry or tocher
  • tonguefish — any of several flatfishes of the family Cynoglossidae, having the tail tapered to a point.
  • tonishness — the quality or state of being tonish
  • toolpusher — a foreman who supervises drilling operations on an oil rig
  • toothpaste — a dentifrice in the form of paste.
  • tophaceous — a calcareous concretion formed in the soft tissue about a joint, in the pinna of the ear, etc., especially in gout; a gouty deposit.
  • touch base — make contact
  • touchstone — a test or criterion for the qualities of a thing.
  • town house — a house in the city, especially as distinguished from a house in the country owned by the same person.
  • toyishness — the quality or state of being toyish
  • track shoe — a light, heelless, usually leather shoe having either steel spikes for use outdoors on a cinder or dirt track, or a rubber sole for use indoors on a board floor.
  • trade show — show (def 22).
  • trap house — a shelter from which the clay pigeons are released in trapshooting.
  • tree house — a small house, especially one for children to play in, built or placed up in the branches of a tree.
  • trichinose — to infest with parasitic worms (trichinae)
  • trophesial — involving or relating to trophesy
  • trophosome — an organ in deep-sea tube worms that is colonized by bacteria supplying the host worm with food and energy.
  • trunk hose — full, baglike breeches covering the body from the waist to the middle of the thigh or lower, sometimes having the stockings attached in one piece, worn by men in the 16th and 17th centuries.
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