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9-letter words containing t, a, i, h

  • arhythmia — arrhythmia.
  • arhythmic — Having no rhythm.
  • arimathea — a town in ancient Palestine: location unknown
  • aristarch — a severe critic.
  • arkwright — Sir Richard. 1732–92, English cotton manufacturer: inventor of the spinning frame (1769) which produced cotton thread strong enough to be used as a warp
  • arthritic — Arthritic is used to describe the condition, the pain, or the symptoms of arthritis.
  • arthritis — Arthritis is a medical condition in which the joints in someone's body are swollen and painful.
  • arthrodia — a joint
  • arthrosis — a bone joint which enables movement
  • arthurian — of or relating to King Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table
  • artichoke — Artichokes or globe artichokes are round green vegetables that have fleshy leaves arranged like the petals of a flower.
  • ashramite — a person who lives in an ashram or place of rest or contemplation
  • asphaltic — Resembling, containing, or relating to asphalt; bituminous.
  • asthmatic — People who suffer from asthma are sometimes referred to as asthmatics.
  • astichous — having a structure or layout that is not in rows
  • athanasia — deathlessness; immortality.
  • atheistic — Atheistic means connected with or holding the belief that there is no God.
  • athelings — Plural form of atheling.
  • athematic — not based on themes
  • athenians — Plural form of Athenian.
  • atherosis — (pathology) atheroma.
  • athetesis — the dismissal of a text as not genuine
  • athetosic — relating to or characterized by athetosis
  • athetosis — a condition characterized by uncontrolled rhythmic writhing movement, esp of fingers, hands, head, and tongue, caused by cerebral lesion
  • athletics — Athletics refers to track and field sports such as running, the high jump, and the javelin.
  • athletism — The state or practice of an athlete; the characteristics of an athlete.
  • atmophile — (of a chemical element in the earth) having an affinity for the atmosphere, as neon or helium.
  • atrahasis — a legendary Akkadian sage who built a boat in which he and his family, servants, and chattels escaped the Deluge.
  • atrophied — exhibiting or affected with atrophy; wasted; withered; shriveled: an atrophied arm; an atrophied talent.
  • atrophies — Also, atrophia [uh-troh-fee-uh] /əˈtroʊ fi ə/ (Show IPA). Pathology. a wasting away of the body or of an organ or part, as from defective nutrition or nerve damage.
  • attaching — to fasten or affix; join; connect: to attach a photograph to an application with a staple.
  • aughtlins — in the least; to the least degree.
  • auschwitz — an industrial town in S Poland; site of a Nazi concentration camp during World War II. Pop: 40 686 (2007 est)
  • autarchic — absolute sovereignty.
  • authentic — An authentic person, object, or emotion is genuine.
  • authorial — Authorial means relating to the author of something such as a book or play.
  • authoring — Authoring is the creation of documents, especially for the Internet.
  • authorise — to give authority or official power to; empower: to authorize an employee to sign purchase orders.
  • authorish — like or similar to an author
  • authorism — the state or condition of being author
  • authority — The authorities are the people who have the power to make decisions and to make sure that laws are obeyed.
  • authorize — If someone in a position of authority authorizes something, they give their official permission for it to happen.
  • away with — a command for a person to go or be removed
  • axanthism — (zoology) Absence of yellow pigmentation.
  • azimuthal — Astronomy, Navigation. the arc of the horizon measured clockwise from the south point, in astronomy, or from the north point, in navigation, to the point where a vertical circle through a given heavenly body intersects the horizon.
  • backlight — light falling on a photographic or television subject from the rear
  • backshift — The changing of a present tense in direct speech to a past tense in reported speech (or a past tense to pluperfect).
  • backsight — the sight of a rifle nearer the stock
  • bad faith — intention to deceive; treachery or dishonesty (esp in the phrase in bad faith)
  • bad thing — (jargon)   (From the 1930 Sellar & Yeatman parody "1066 And All That") Something that can't possibly result in improvement of the subject. This term is always capitalised, as in "Replacing all of the 9600-baud modems with bicycle couriers would be a Bad Thing". Opposite: Good Thing. British correspondents confirm that Bad Thing and Good Thing (and probably therefore Right Thing and Wrong Thing) come from the book referenced in the etymology, which discusses rulers who were Good Kings but Bad Things. This has apparently created a mainstream idiom on the British side of the pond.
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