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11-letter words containing t, h, e, b, l

  • bridle path — A bridle path is a path intended for people riding horses.
  • bright-line — (of rules, standards, etc.) unambiguously clear: This muddies the waters of what should be a brightline rule.
  • brittlebush — any of several composite plants of the genus Encelia, of desert regions of the southwestern U.S. and Mexico, having alternate leaves and yellow ray flowers with a yellow or purple center.
  • brotherlike — like a brother
  • bubble bath — Bubble bath is a liquid that smells nice and makes a lot of bubbles when you add it to your bath water.
  • bullet hole — hole made by a bullet
  • bullfighter — A bullfighter is the person who tries to injure or kill the bull in a bullfight.
  • bullshitter — nonsense, lies, or exaggeration.
  • burnt shale — carbonaceous shale formed by destructive distillation of oil shale or by spontaneous combustion of shale after it has been some years in a tip: sometimes used in road making
  • bus shelter — A bus shelter is a bus stop that has a roof and at least one open side.
  • butt chisel — any woodworking chisel having a blade less than 4 inches (10 cm) long.
  • button-hole — the hole, slit, or loop through which a button is passed and by which it is secured.
  • buttonholer — a person who buttonholes
  • chair table — an article of furniture, produced especially in colonial America, that can serve as either a table or a chair, having, as a chair, a large, usually circular, hinged back that can be pulled down and rested on the arms to form a tabletop.
  • chantefable — (in medieval French literature) a prose narrative interspersed with verse.
  • delightable — (obsolete) Delightful.
  • dissembleth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dissemble.
  • doublethink — the acceptance of two contradictory ideas or beliefs at the same time.
  • elizabeth i — 1533–1603, queen of England (1558–1603); daughter of Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn. She established the Church of England (1559) and put an end to Catholic plots, notably by executing Mary Queen of Scots (1587) and defeating the Spanish Armada (1588). Her reign was notable for commercial growth, maritime expansion, and the flourishing of literature, music, and architecture
  • elizabethan — of or from period of Elizabeth I
  • escheatable — Liable to escheat.
  • established — (of a custom, belief, practice, or institution) Having been in existence for a long time and therefore recognized and generally accepted.
  • establisher — A person who establishes something.
  • establishes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of establish.
  • exhaustible — Capable of being exhausted.
  • exhibitable — Capable of being exhibited.
  • fire blight — a disease of pears, apples, quinces, etc., characterized by blossom, twig, and fruit blight and stem cankers, caused by a bacterium, Erwinia amylovora.
  • flitch beam — a beam composed of planks bolted together side by side and often reinforced with a plate of iron or steel.
  • habiliments — Plural form of habiliment.
  • habilitated — Simple past tense and past participle of habilitate.
  • halberstadt — a town in central Germany, in Saxony-Anhalt: industrial centre noted for its historic buildings. Pop: 40 014 (2003 est)
  • half-bottle — a bottle half the size of a standard bottle of wine, spirits, etc
  • halfbrother — Alternative spelling of half brother.
  • halterbreak — to get (an animal) used to wearing a halter
  • harvestable — Also, harvesting. the gathering of crops.
  • health club — a usually private club that offers its members facilities for exercising and physical conditioning.
  • heart block — a defect in the electrical impulses of the heart resulting in any of various arrhythmias or irregularities in the heartbeat.
  • heel breast — the forward side of the heel, adjoining the shank of a shoe.
  • hematoblast — an immature blood cell, especially a red blood cell.
  • herbologist — the study or collecting of herbs, especially as a hobby.
  • hereditable — heritable.
  • hobbletehoy — Archaic form of hobbledehoy.
  • holobenthic — (of an animal) completing its life cycle in the ocean depths
  • hostile bid — A hostile takeover bid is one that is opposed by the company that is being bid for.
  • hot-blooded — excitable; impetuous.
  • hurtleberry — whortleberry.
  • hyperbolist — One who uses hyperbole; an exaggerator.
  • in the club — pregnant
  • inhabitable — to live or dwell in (a place), as people or animals: Small animals inhabited the woods.
  • inheritable — capable of being inherited.
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