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10-letter words containing t, e, r, h

  • ravishment — rapture or ecstasy.
  • rawsthorne — Alan. 1905–71, English composer, whose works include three symphonies, several concertos, and a set of Symphonic Studies (1939)
  • re-exhibit — to exhibit again
  • rear light — vehicle's tail or back light
  • rear sight — the sight nearest the breech of a firearm.
  • reattached — to fasten or affix; join; connect: to attach a photograph to an application with a staple.
  • rebirthing — a form of psychotherapy in which the subject supposedly "relives" the experience of being born, in order to confront and overcome traumas and anxieties stemming from birth
  • rechristen — to christen or baptize (someone) again
  • redispatch — to send off or away with speed, as a messenger, telegram, body of troops, etc.
  • redruthite — an important dark-grey or black copper ore mineral which is a sulphide
  • redshifted — (of radiation) having undergone a redshift.
  • reentrench — to place in a position of strength; establish firmly or solidly: safely entrenched behind undeniable facts.
  • regal moth — a large moth, Citheronia regalis, having yellow spots on gray to olive forewings and on orange-red hind wings.
  • reichstein — Tadeus [tah-dey-oo s] /tɑˈdeɪ ʊs/ (Show IPA), 1897–1996, Swiss chemist, born in Poland: Nobel Prize in medicine 1950.
  • reshipment — the act of reshipping
  • resighting — the power or faculty of seeing; perception of objects by use of the eyes; vision.
  • restharrow — a low, pink-flowered European shrub, Ononis spinosa, of the legume family, having tough roots that hinder the plow or harrow.
  • reteaching — to impart knowledge of or skill in; give instruction in: She teaches mathematics. Synonyms: coach.
  • rethinking — the act of reconsidering.
  • retrochoir — that part of a church behind the choir or the main altar.
  • revanchist — an advocate or supporter of a political policy of revanche, especially in order to seek vengeance for a previous military defeat.
  • rheopectic — the property exhibited by certain slow-gelling, thixotropic sols of gelling more rapidly when the containing vessel is shaken gently.
  • rheostatic — an adjustable resistor so constructed that its resistance may be changed without opening the circuit in which it is connected, thereby controlling the current in the circuit.
  • rhetorical — used for, belonging to, or concerned with mere style or effect.
  • rheumatics — pertaining to or of the nature of rheumatism.
  • rheumatism — any disorder of the extremities or back, characterized by pain and stiffness.
  • rheumatoid — resembling rheumatism.
  • rhinestone — an artificial gem of paste, often cut to resemble a diamond.
  • rhinotheca — the covering of the upper part of the beak in birds
  • rhotacized — to change (a sound) to an (r); subject to rhotacism.
  • rhythmless — movement or procedure with uniform or patterned recurrence of a beat, accent, or the like.
  • richthofen — Baron Manfred von [mahn-freyt fuh n] /ˈmɑn freɪt fən/ (Show IPA), ("Red Baron"or"Red Knight") 1892–1918, German aviator.
  • ricocheted — the motion of an object or a projectile in rebounding or deflecting one or more times from the surface over which it is passing or against which it hits a glancing blow.
  • rifle shot — sound of shotgun fire
  • right face — Military. a command, given to a soldier or soldiers at attention, to turn the body about toward the right so as to face in the opposite direction. the act of so turning in a prescribed military manner.
  • rotary hoe — a cultivating implement consisting of a row of wheels each with many fingerlike prongs, pulled over the ground to break up the soil and destroy weeds.
  • rothermere1st Viscount, Harold Sidney Harmsworth.
  • routemarch — march in which a unit retains its column formation but individuals are allowed to break step.
  • ruthenious — containing bivalent ruthenium.
  • rutherfordDaniel, 1749–1819, Scottish physician and chemist: discoverer of nitrogen.
  • ruthlessly — without pity or compassion; cruel; merciless: a ruthless tyrant.
  • sabretache — a leather case suspended from a cavalryman's saddle
  • saccharate — a salt of saccharic acid.
  • salt horse — salted beef; salt junk.
  • saltshaker — table-salt dispenser
  • samothrace — a Greek island in the NE Aegean.
  • saprophyte — any organism that lives on dead organic matter, as certain fungi and bacteria.
  • schnitzler — Arthur [ahr-ther;; German ahr-too r] /ˈɑr θər;; German ˈɑr tʊər/ (Show IPA), 1862–1931, Austrian dramatist and novelist.
  • schumpeter — Joseph Alois [uh-lois] /əˈlɔɪs/ (Show IPA), 1883–1950, U.S. economist, born in Austria.
  • schweitzerAlbert, 1875–1965, Alsatian writer, missionary, doctor, and musician in Africa: Nobel Peace Prize 1952.
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