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11-letter words containing s, t, h, r, i

  • starchitect — a well-known and well-paid architect noted for his or her landmark buildings
  • starlighted — lit by the stars
  • stasimorphy — structural modification by arrested development
  • stenohygric — able to withstand only a narrow range of humidity
  • stewardship — the position and duties of a steward, a person who acts as the surrogate of another or others, especially by managing property, financial affairs, an estate, etc.
  • stichometry — the practice of writing a prose text in lines, often of slightly differing lengths, that correspond to units of sense and indicate phrasal rhythms.
  • stitchcraft — needlework or embroidery
  • straichtest — straightest
  • straight up — without a bend, angle, or curve; not curved; direct: a straight path.
  • straight-up — without a bend, angle, or curve; not curved; direct: a straight path.
  • straightest — without a bend, angle, or curve; not curved; direct: a straight path.
  • straightish — almost but not quite straight
  • straightway — straightaway.
  • strap hinge — a hinge having a flap, especially a long one, attached to one face of a door or the like.
  • strap-hinge — a hinge having a flap, especially a long one, attached to one face of a door or the like.
  • strawweight — a boxer of the lightest competitive class, especially a boxer weighing up to 104 pounds (47.2 kg).
  • streetlight — a light, usually supported by a lamppost, for illuminating a street or road.
  • strike home — to deliver an effective blow
  • strip light — A strip light is an electric light in the form of a long tube.
  • superbright — exceptionally bright
  • svarabhakti — the process of inserting vowel sounds into a consonant cluster, as in a loanword to make it conform to the pattern of the speaker's language and, hence, more easily pronounceable, as in the Italian pronunciation [lahn-tsee-ke-nek-kaw] /ˌlɑn tsi kɛˈnɛk kɔ/ (Show IPA) for German Landsknecht [lahnts-knekht] /ˈlɑntsˌknɛxt/ (Show IPA).
  • swarthiness — (of skin color, complexion, etc.) dark.
  • sweat shirt — a heavy, loose, usually long-sleeved pullover made of cotton jersey, worn as by athletes to absorb sweat during or after exercise, sometimes with loose trousers (sweat pants) of the same material, forming an ensemble (sweat suit)
  • sweet birch — a North American tree, Betula lenta, having smooth, blackish bark and twigs that are a source of methyl salicylate.
  • swipe right — to move a finger from left to right across a touchscreen in order to approve an image
  • switch over — If you switch over when you are watching television, you change to another channel.
  • switch yard — a railroad yard in which rolling stock is distributed or made up into trains.
  • switchboard — a structural unit on which are mounted switches and instruments necessary to complete telephone circuits manually.
  • switchgrass — a North American prairie grass
  • sword fight — duel with long-bladed weapons
  • sympathizer — a person who sympathizes.
  • synthesiser — a person who, or thing which, synthesizes
  • synthesizer — a person or thing that synthesizes.
  • synthetizer — a person or thing that synthetizes
  • tax sharing — revenue sharing.
  • teachership — a person who teaches or instructs, especially as a profession; instructor.
  • telearchics — the remote control of electronic devices
  • terpsichore — Classical Mythology. the Muse of dancing and choral song.
  • tertianship — (in the Jesuit order) a period of strict discipline before the taking of final vows, beginning one or two years after ordination.
  • tetratheism — the belief that the Christian God is four persons
  • thanksgiver — a person who gives thanks.
  • thatcherism — the conservative policies, political philosophy, and leadership style of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, characterized especially by monetarism, privatization, and labor union reform.
  • the british — the people of Great Britain
  • the cornish — the natives or inhabitants of Cornwall
  • the diggers — a radical English Puritan group, led by Gerrard Winstanley, which advocated communal ownership of land (1649–50)
  • the forties — the numbers 40–49 in a particular century, esp the 20th century
  • the jitters — nervousness and anxiety
  • the midrash — these commentaries and notes collectively
  • the shivers — an attack of shivering, esp through fear or illness
  • the strings — violins, violas, cellos, and double basses collectively
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