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9-letter words containing t, h, e, l

  • 5th glove — (hardware, virtual reality)   A data glove and flexor strip kit (5th Glove DFK) sold by Fifth Dimension Technologies for $495 ($345 for the left-handed version, $45 for each extra flexor strip). The DFK provides a data glove, a flexon strip (with an elbow or knee-joint sensor), an interface card, cables, and KineMusica software. The package uses flexible optical-bending sensing to track hand and arm movement. The glove can be used with 5DT's ultrasonic tracking system, the 5DT Head and Hand tracker ($245), which can track movement from up to two metres away from the unit's transmitter.
  • aethalium — a large, plump, pillow-shaped fruiting body of certain myxomycetes, formed by the aggregation of plasmodia into a single functional mass.
  • aetheling — atheling.
  • aethereal — ethereal
  • alchemist — An alchemist was a scientist in the Middle Ages who tried to discover how to change ordinary metals into gold.
  • aldershot — a town in S England, in Hampshire: site of a large military camp. Pop: 58 170 (2001)
  • alecithal — (of an ovum) having little or no yolk
  • alembroth — a double salt composed of the chlorides of ammonium and mercury, formerly believed to be a universal solvent
  • aleph-bet — the Hebrew alphabet
  • all there — having his or her wits about him or her; of normal intelligence
  • allethrin — a clear viscous amber-coloured liquid used as an insecticide and synergist. Formula: C19H26O3; relative density: 1.005
  • aloha net — (networking)   (From the Hawaiian greeting) One of the first functioning networks in the USA, conceived and implimented at the University of Hawaii campus at Manoa. Its purpose was to link the University mainframe computer to client computers located on outer islands at University campuses. Put in place in the early 1970s, it was dubed the Aloha Net. Key punch cards were fed through a reader, and sent over the commercial phone lines.
  • alphabets — Plural form of alphabet.
  • althusser — Louis. 1918–90, French Marxist philosopher, author of For Marx (1965) and Reading Capital (1965): committed to a mental hospital (1981) after killing his wife
  • amalthaea — the goat that nurses Zeus (Jupiter): one of its horns is called the cornucopia
  • ampholyte — an amphoteric electrolyte
  • anthelion — a faint halo sometimes seen in polar or high altitude regions around the shadow of an object cast onto a thick cloud bank or fog
  • antihelix — the rounded piece of cartilage inside the outer rim (helix) of the ear; anthelix
  • archilute — Alternative form of archlute.
  • asphalted — Simple past tense and past participle of asphalt.
  • asphalter — a person who spreads a layer of asphalt
  • at length — If someone does something at length, they do it after a long period of time.
  • athelings — Plural form of atheling.
  • athelstan — ?895–939 ad, king of Wessex and Mercia (924–939 ad), who extended his kingdom to include most of England
  • atheology — a resistance or aversion to theology
  • athletics — Athletics refers to track and field sports such as running, the high jump, and the javelin.
  • athletism — The state or practice of an athlete; the characteristics of an athlete.
  • atmophile — (of a chemical element in the earth) having an affinity for the atmosphere, as neon or helium.
  • aulophyte — a free-living plant growing on or in another plant.
  • barthelmeDonald, 1931–89, U.S. short-story writer and novelist.
  • batchelor — (British) alternative spelling of bachelor.
  • batholite — (obsolete) alternative name of batholith.
  • bell moth — any moth of the family Tortricidae, which when at rest resemble the shape of a bell
  • berthelot — Pierre Eugène Marselin [marsuh-lan] /mærsəˈlɛ̃/ (Show IPA), 1827–1907, French chemist.
  • bethlehem — a town in the West Bank, near Jerusalem: birthplace of Jesus and early home of King David
  • betrothal — A betrothal is an agreement to be married.
  • biathlete — an athlete taking part in a biathlon
  • blanchett — Cate (keɪt), full name Catherine Elise Blanchett. born 1969, Australian actress; her films include Elizabeth (1998), the Lord of the Rings trilogy (2001–03), Notes on a Scandal (2006), and Blue Jasmine (2013) for which she won an Academy Award
  • blatherer — someone who blathers
  • blethered — weary
  • bletherer — someone who blathers
  • blitheful — joyous, merry, or happy in disposition; glad; cheerful: Everyone loved her for her blithe spirit.
  • bluemouth — a deep water fish, Helicolenus dactylopterus
  • blueshift — a shift in the spectral lines of a stellar spectrum towards the blue end of the visible region relative to the wavelengths of these lines in the terrestrial spectrum: a result of the Doppler effect caused by stars approaching the solar system
  • bluetooth — Bluetooth is a technology that allows computers, mobile phones and other devices to communicate with each other without being connected by wires.
  • blunthead — a frequent recreational user of marijuana
  • bolt hole — a hole in the ground, protected opening in bushes, etc., into which an animal can flee when pursued or frightened.
  • bolt-hole — If you say that someone has a bolt-hole to go to, you mean that there is somewhere that they can go when they want to get away from people that they know.
  • botchedly — in a botched or clumsy manner
  • branchlet — a small branch

On this page, we collect all 9-letter words with T-H-E-L. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 9-letter word that contains in T-H-E-L to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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