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11-letter words containing s, t, h

  • ghost-write — If a book or other piece of writing is ghost-written, it is written by a writer for another person, for example a politician or sportsman, who then publishes it as his or her own work.
  • ghostbuster — A person who claims to be able to banish ghosts and poltergeists.
  • ghostliness — of, characteristic of, or resembling a ghost; phantasmal; spectral.
  • ghostscript — (graphics, tool)   The GNU interpreter for PostScript and PDF, with previewers for serval systems and many fonts. Ghostscript was originally written by L. Peter Deutsch <[email protected]> of Aladdin Enterprises. The first public release was v1.0 on 1988-08-11.
  • ghostwriter — A person whose job it is to write material for someone else who is the named author.
  • give a shit — excrement; feces.
  • give thanks — be thankful, express thankfulness
  • gnathostome — (zoology) Any vertebrate with jaws, including amphibians, reptiles, mammals, and most modern fish.
  • gnetophytes — Plural form of gnetophyte.
  • go straight — without a bend, angle, or curve; not curved; direct: a straight path.
  • go to smash — to become smashed, broken, or ruined
  • goat cheese — a cheese containing goat's milk, either alone or mixed with cow's milk, usually having a stronger flavor than one made of cow's milk alone.
  • goatishness — The state or condition of being goatish.
  • goldschmidt — Richard Benedikt. 1878–1958, US geneticist, born in Germany. He advanced the theory that heredity is determined by the chemical configuration of the chromosome molecule rather than by the qualities of the individual genes
  • goldthreads — Plural form of goldthread.
  • gospel oath — an oath sworn on the Gospels
  • grade sheet — a piece of paper on which a student's grades are recorded
  • grass cloth — a cloth made from plant fibres, such as jute or hemp
  • greenhearts — Plural form of greenheart.
  • greenschist — schist colored green by an abundance of chlorite, epidote, or actinolite.
  • groatsworth — the amount that is, or may be, bought or sold for a groat
  • groundsheet — a waterproof sheet of plastic, canvas, or other durable material spread on the ground, as under a sleeping bag or in a tent, for protection against moisture.
  • growthiness — the quality of being growthy
  • guest house — small hotel
  • guest night — an evening when members of an institution are allowed to bring guests
  • guesthouses — Plural form of guesthouse.
  • gunsmithing — The craft of a gunsmith.
  • gymnanthous — achlamydeous.
  • h-stretcher — a stretcher having the form of an H .
  • habiliments — Plural form of habiliment.
  • habitations — Plural form of habitation.
  • hackmatacks — Plural form of hackmatack.
  • haemoptysis — (British spelling) alternative spelling of hemoptysis.
  • haemostasis — Alternative spelling of hemostasis.
  • haemostatic — That promotes haemostasis.
  • hagiologist — A writer on the lives of the saints; a hagiographer.
  • haines city — a town in central Florida.
  • hair stroke — a fine line in writing or printing.
  • hairstreaks — Plural form of hairstreak.
  • hairstyling — a person who designs and arranges hair styles.
  • hairstylist — A person who cuts and styles people's hair professionally.
  • halberstadt — a town in central Germany, in Saxony-Anhalt: industrial centre noted for its historic buildings. Pop: 40 014 (2003 est)
  • half sister — sister (def 2).
  • half-sister — sister (def 2).
  • hallstattan — of, relating to, or belonging to a variously dated early period of Iron Age culture in Europe, characterized by the use of bronze, the introduction of iron, and by artistic work in pottery, jewelry, etc.
  • hamfistedly — Alternative spelling of ham-fistedly.
  • hammersmith — a borough of Greater London, England.
  • hammersteinOscar, 1847?–1919, U.S. theatrical manager, born in Germany.
  • hammerstone — an ancient stone tool used as a hammer, as for chipping flint, processing food, or breaking up bones.
  • hamstringed — (in humans and other primates) any of the tendons that bound the ham of the knee.
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