10-letter words containing t, a, k, h
- lake tahoe — a lake between E California and W Nevada, in the Sierra Nevada Mountains at an altitude of 1899 m (6229 ft). Area: about 520 sq km (200 sq miles)
- lake worth — a city in SE Florida.
- latch hook — a handheld tool similar to a latch needle, used for drawing loops of yarn through canvas or similar material to make rugs and the like.
- leukopathy — (pathology) depigmentation of the skin.
- lukewarmth — lukewarmness
- mackintosh — Charles Rennie [ren-ee] /ˈrɛn i/ (Show IPA), 1868–1928, Scottish architect and designer.
- make a hit — If you make a hit with someone, they like you or are impressed by you when they meet you.
- make haste — swiftness of motion; speed; celerity: He performed his task with great haste. They felt the need for haste.
- make shift — to manage or do the best one can (with whatever means are at hand)
- makeshifts — Plural form of makeshift.
- makeweight — something put in a scale to complete a required weight.
- matchbooks — Plural form of matchbook.
- matchlocks — Plural form of matchlock.
- matchmaker — a person who makes matches for burning.
- matchstick — a short, slender piece of flammable wood used in making matches.
- matryoshka — Each of a set of brightly painted hollow wooden dolls of varying sizes, designed to nest inside one another.
- meat hooks — the hands or fists
- mukhabarat — (in Middle Eastern countries) a secret police force
- mythmakers — Plural form of mythmaker.
- mythmaking — the practice of creating myths
- night-hawk — any of several longwinged, American goatsuckers of the genus Chordeiles, related to the whippoorwill, especially C. minor, having variegated black, white, and buff plumage.
- nighthawks — Plural form of nighthawk.
- notchbacks — Plural form of notchback.
- nouakchott — Official name Islamic Republic of Mauritania. a republic in W Africa, largely in the Sahara Desert: formerly a French colony; a member of the French Community 1958–66; independent 1960. 418,120 sq. mi. (1,082,931 sq. km). Capital: Nouakchott.
- packthread — a strong thread or twine for sewing or tying up packages.
- patchcocke — a clown
- pitch lake — a deposit of natural asphalt in SW Trinidad, West Indies. 114 acres (47 hectares).
- pitch-dark — dark or black as pitch: a pitch-dark night.
- pohutukawa — a myrtaceous New Zealand tree, Metrosideros excelsa, with red flowers and hard red wood
- quickhatch — a wolverine.
- right bank — a part of Paris, France, on the N bank of the Seine.
- salt chuck — the ocean.
- salt shake — a salt shaker.
- saltshaker — table-salt dispenser
- shackleton — Sir Ernest Henry, 1874–1922, English explorer of the Antarctic.
- shakuntala — Sakuntala.
- sheeptrack — a small natural terrace on a hillside
- shirtmaker — a person who makes shirts.
- shockstall — the loss of lift and increase of drag experienced by transonic aircraft when strong shock waves on the wings cause the airflow to separate from the wing surfaces
- shotmaking — the playing of good shots (by a sports player)
- skaithless — without injury or damage
- sketch map — a rough map of the principal features of a locale, as one drawn from memory.
- sketchable — suitable for being sketched.
- skin patch — an adhesive patch stuck to the skin to slowly and steadily release medicine into the bloodstream
- snakemouth — rose pogonia.
- spatchcock — a fowl that has been dressed and split open for grilling.
- steakhouse — a restaurant specializing in beefsteak.
- swatchbook — a booklet containing samples (of paper, cloth, etc)
- switchback — a highway, as in a mountainous area, having many hairpin curves.
- take heart — Anatomy. a hollow, pumplike organ of blood circulation, composed mainly of rhythmically contractile smooth muscle, located in the chest between the lungs and slightly to the left and consisting of four chambers: a right atrium that receives blood returning from the body via the superior and inferior vena cavae, a right ventricle that pumps the blood through the pulmonary artery to the lungs for oxygenation, a left atrium that receives the oxygenated blood via the pulmonary veins and passes it through the mitral valve, and a left ventricle that pumps the oxygenated blood, via the aorta, throughout the body.