0%

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

  • tzarevitch — czarevitch
  • uintathere — any hoofed North American mammal of the extinct genus Dinoceras, of the Eocene Epoch, having a massive body and three pairs of horns.
  • ultrafiche — a form of microfiche with the images greatly reduced in size, generally by a factor of 100 or more.
  • ultraheavy — extremely heavy
  • umber moth — any of various brownish geometrid moths, esp the waved umber (Menophra abruptaria) and small waved umber (Horisme vitalbata), that are cryptically marked to merge with tree bark, and the mottled umber (Erannis defoliaria) whose looper larvae can strip branches and even trees
  • unberthing — a shelflike sleeping space, as on a ship, airplane, or railroad car.
  • unbothered — not experiencing mental or physical discomfort: He was unbothered by the cold. He was unbothered about not being picked for the team.
  • unbreathed — not breathed: unbreathed air.
  • unchristen — unchristian
  • under oath — having sworn to tell the truth
  • underearth — the soil found beneath the surface of something
  • underneath — below the surface or level of; directly or vertically beneath; at or on the bottom of.
  • underpitch — of or relating to a type of groin-vaulted ceiling construction
  • undershirt — a collarless, usually pullover undergarment for the torso, usually of cotton and either sleeveless and low-cut or with sleeves, worn chiefly by men and children.
  • undershoot — to shoot or launch a projectile that strikes under or short of (a target).
  • undersight — the power or faculty of seeing; perception of objects by use of the eyes; vision.
  • underthrow — to throw a ball or other object short of (the intended receiver or target)
  • unethereal — extremely delicate or refined: ethereal beauty.
  • unfathered — having no father; fatherless.
  • unfatherly — not fatherly; not characteristic or appropriate of a father
  • ungathered — not collected together
  • unitholder — a person who owns a unit of something
  • unmotherly — not motherly
  • untethered — to fasten or confine with or as if with a tether.
  • untochered — (of a woman) undowered; not provided with a tocher
  • untogether — disorganized; confused; chaotic: Right after the divorce was a very untogether time for me.
  • untrenched — not entrenched or fortified with trenches
  • unwithered — to shrivel; fade; decay: The grapes had withered on the vine.
  • upgathered — to gather up or together: to upgather information.
  • upholstery — the materials used to cushion and cover furniture.
  • urethritis — inflammation of the urethra.
  • urosthenic — having a tail which drives movement of the body
  • vectograph — a technology that uses special glasses to see a photographic image between two plastic sheets as three dimensional
  • very light — highly illuminated
  • wafer-thin — very thin: a wafer-thin slice.
  • waiterhood — the state of being a waiter
  • wanthriven — poorly developed or undersized
  • ward eight — a mixed drink containing whiskey, lemon juice, grenadine, and often soda water, served in a tall glass with crushed ice and sometimes garnished with an orange slice and a cherry.
  • warfighter — A soldier in combat.
  • washateria — a launderette.
  • washeteria — washateria.
  • watch fire — a fire maintained during the night as a signal and for providing light and warmth for guards.
  • watch over — to be alertly on the lookout, look attentively, or observe, as to see what comes, is done, or happens: to watch while an experiment is performed.
  • watchmaker — a person whose occupation it is to make and repair watches.
  • watchtower — a tower on which a sentinel keeps watch.
  • water bath — a system for the control of temperature in which a vessel containing the material to be heated is set into or over one containing water and receiving the heat directly.
  • water hole — a depression in the surface of the ground, containing water.
  • water-bath — a system for the control of temperature in which a vessel containing the material to be heated is set into or over one containing water and receiving the heat directly.
  • water-inch — the quantity of water (approx. 500 cubic feet) discharged in 24 hours through a circular opening of one inch diameter leading from a reservoir in which the water is constantly only high enough to cover the orifice.
  • waterhouse — Alfred. 1830–1905, British architect; a leader of the Gothic Revival. His buildings include Manchester Town Hall (1868) and the Natural History Museum, London (1881)
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?