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11-letter words containing s, o, u, a

  • gemmiparous — producing or reproducing by buds or gemmae.
  • glamorously — In a glamorous manner.
  • glamourless — Without glamour; unglamorous, mundane.
  • glamourpuss — a glamorous person, esp a woman
  • glasshouses — Plural form of glasshouse.
  • glastonbury — a borough of SW England, in whose vicinity the ruins of an important Iron Age lake village have been found and to which in folklore both King Arthur and Joseph of Arimathaea have been linked, the latter as the founder of the abbey there.
  • glucokinase — an enzyme, found in all living systems, that serves to catalyze the phosphorylation of gluconic acid.
  • glucosamine — an aminosugar occurring in many polysaccharides of vertebrate tissue and also as the major component of chitin.
  • glucosidase — (enzyme) Any enzyme that hydrolyses glucosides.
  • goatsuckers — Plural form of goatsucker.
  • goes around — to move or proceed, especially to or from something: They're going by bus.
  • gourmandise — unrestrained enjoyment of fine foods, wines, and the like.
  • gourmandism — a person who is fond of good eating, often indiscriminatingly and to excess.
  • graduations — Plural form of graduation.
  • graniferous — bearing grain
  • granivorous — (of an animal, especially a bird) eating grain and seeds.
  • grass court — an outdoor tennis court having a grass surface.
  • gratuitious — Misspelling of gratuitous.
  • ground bass — a short fundamental bass part continually repeated throughout a movement.
  • groundshare — to share the facilities and running costs of a single stadium with another team
  • guaniferous — yielding guano
  • guardhouses — Plural form of guardhouse.
  • guardswoman — A female guardsman.
  • guardswomen — Plural form of guardswoman.
  • guildswoman — a woman who is a member of a guild
  • gustatorily — in a gustatory manner
  • gymnanthous — achlamydeous.
  • hadrosaurid — (zoology) Any of the family Hadrosauridae of duck-billed dinosaurs; a hadrosaur.
  • haplogroups — Plural form of haplogroup.
  • harbourless — Without a harbour.
  • harbourside — An area (especially a residential area) near a harbour (often in the form of converted warehouses etc).
  • hasta luego — so long; (I'll) see you soon
  • haute-saone — a department in E France. 2075 sq. mi. (5375 sq. km). Capital: Vesoul.
  • hazardously — In a hazardous manner.
  • heat source — sth that generates warmth
  • hederaceous — (rare) Of, pertaining to, or resembling ivy.
  • heptagynous — (of a flower) having seven pistils
  • heptamerous — consisting of or divided into seven parts.
  • heptandrous — (of a flower) having seven stamens
  • hercogamous — (of flowers) incapable of self-fertilization
  • hilariously — arousing great merriment; extremely funny: a hilarious story; a hilarious old movie.
  • hippocampus — Classical Mythology. a sea horse with two forefeet, and a body ending in the tail of a dolphin or fish.
  • hippodamous — horse-taming
  • holocaustic — a great or complete devastation or destruction, especially by fire.
  • homo-sexual — Older Use: Sometimes Disparaging. sexually attracted to members of one's own sex: homosexual students.
  • homoiousian — a member of a 4th-century a.d. church party that maintained that the essence of the Son is similar to, but not the same as, that of the Father.
  • homosexuals — Plural form of homosexual.
  • honorariums — Plural form of honorarium.
  • 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 guard — a black and yellow sand wasp, Bembix carolina, of the southern U.S., preying on flies that gather around horses and cattle.
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