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

  • rehabilitant — a person who is undergoing rehabilitation, especially for a physical disability.
  • rehabilitate — to restore to a condition of good health, ability to work, or the like.
  • rehydratable — capable of being rehydrated
  • shareability — the state or property of being able to be shared
  • shelter belt — a row of trees planted to protect an area from the wind
  • slipper bath — a bath in the shape of a slipper, with a covered end
  • soul brother — a black male, especially a fellow black male.
  • strobe light — a device for studying the motion of a body, especially a body in rapid revolution or vibration, by making the motion appear to slow down or stop, as by periodically illuminating the body or viewing it through widely spaced openings in a revolving disk.
  • strobe-light — a device for studying the motion of a body, especially a body in rapid revolution or vibration, by making the motion appear to slow down or stop, as by periodically illuminating the body or viewing it through widely spaced openings in a revolving disk.
  • subthreshold — (of a stimulus) too weak to produce a response.
  • table d'hote — a meal of preselected courses served at a fixed time and price to the guests at a hotel or restaurant.
  • tablet chair — a chair with one arm extending and expanding into a writing surface.
  • teachability — capable of being instructed, as a person; docile.
  • technobabble — incomprehensible technical language or jargon.
  • the absolute — ultimate reality regarded as uncaused, unmodified, unified and complete, timeless, etc.
  • the bastille — a state prison in Paris that was stormed and destroyed (1789) in the French Revolution: its destruction is commemorated on Bastille Day, July 14
  • the blue boy — a famous portrait by Gainsborough of a boy wearing a blue outfit
  • the bollocks — something excellent
  • the bushveld — an area of low altitude in N South Africa, having scrub vegetation
  • the crucible — a Sheffield theatre, venue of the annual world professional snooker championship
  • the disabled — those who are physically or mentally disabled; the handicapped
  • the old bill — policemen collectively or in general
  • the troubles — political unrest or public disturbances
  • the-bell-jar — a novel (1963) by Sylvia Plath.
  • thermolabile — subject to destruction or loss of characteristic properties by the action of moderate heat, as certain toxins and enzymes (opposed to thermostable).
  • thermostable — capable of being subjected to a moderate degree of heat without loss of characteristic properties, as certain toxins and enzymes (opposed to thermolabile).
  • thimbleberry — any of several American raspberries bearing a thimble-shaped fruit, especially the black raspberry, Rubus occidentalis.
  • thistle tube — a glass funnel consisting of a long narrow tube with a thistle-shaped head.
  • throttleable — capable of having the thrust varied.
  • toynbee hall — a residential settlement in East London, named after Arnold Toynbee (1852–83), a British economist and social reformer
  • troubleshoot — to act or be employed as a troubleshooter: She troubleshoots for a large industrial firm.
  • unalphabetic — in the order of the letters of the alphabet: alphabetical arrangement.
  • unbreathable — not able to be breathed
  • uncharitable — deficient in charity; unkind; harsh; unforgiving; censorious; merciless: an uncharitable attitude; an uncharitable neighbor.
  • unfathomable — not able to be fathomed, or completely understood; incomprehensible: heroism in the face of unfathomable conflict.
  • unhospitable — not hospitable
  • unstanchable — unstoppable
  • well-thumbed — A book or magazine that is well-thumbed is creased and marked because it has been read so often.
  • welsh rabbit — a dish of melted cheese, usually mixed with ale or beer, milk, and spices, served over toast.
  • whortleberry — the edible black berry of a Eurasian shrub, Vaccinium myrtillus, of the heath family.
  • witch hobble — the hobblebush.
  • withdrawable — to draw back, away, or aside; take back; remove: She withdrew her hand from his. He withdrew his savings from the bank.
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