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11-letter words containing t, h, e, n, o

  • snapshotted — an informal photograph, especially one taken quickly by a handheld camera.
  • soft hyphen — a hyphen that is used only in breaking a word at the end of a line of text.
  • sottishness — the state of being sottish
  • south devon — a breed of large red cattle originally from South Devon
  • south ogden — a town in N Utah.
  • south yemen — Yemen (def 3).
  • southernism — a pronunciation, expression, or behavioral trait characteristic of the U.S. South.
  • southernize — to make or become southern
  • southlander — a person from the south
  • sponge bath — a bath in which the bather is cleaned by a wet sponge or washcloth dipped in water, without getting into a tub of water.
  • stench bomb — a small bomb made to emit a foul smell on exploding.
  • stenobathic — of or relating to marine or freshwater life that can tolerate only limited changes in depth (opposed to eurybathic).
  • stenochrome — a printed design made using stenochromy
  • stenochromy — the art of printing designs made of more than one colour using a single impression
  • stenography — the art of writing in shorthand.
  • stenohaline — (of an aquatic organism) unable to withstand wide variation in salinity of the surrounding water.
  • stenohygric — able to withstand only a narrow range of humidity
  • stephanotis — any vine belonging to the genus Stephanotis, of the milkweed family, having fragrant, waxy, white flowers and leathery leaves.
  • stereophony — the state or condition of being stereophonic.
  • stockhausen — Karlheinz [kahrl-hahynts] /ˈkɑrlˌhaɪnts/ (Show IPA), 1928–2007, German composer.
  • stone china — hard earthenware containing china stone.
  • stone sheep — a wild sheep found in the Yukon and the northern Rocky Mountains
  • stone shoot — a long steeply sloping line of loose boulder-strewn scree
  • stonewashed — to wash (cloth) with pebbles or stones so as to give the appearance of wear.
  • switched on — turned-on (def 1).
  • switched-on — turned-on (def 1).
  • symphonette — a small symphony orchestra that usually specializes in playing short, familiar classical works or salon music.
  • talent show — a theatrical show in which a series of usually amateur or aspiring singers, dancers, comedians, instrumentalists, etc., perform in the hope of gaining recognition.
  • tautochrone — a curve upon which a moving object will reach a certain point at the same time through gravity from whichever point it starts
  • tchervonetz — chervonets.
  • technicolor — (often lowercase) flamboyant or lurid, as in color, meaning, or detail.
  • technocracy — a theory and movement, prominent about 1932, advocating control of industrial resources, reform of financial institutions, and reorganization of the social system, based on the findings of technologists and engineers.
  • technologic — of or relating to technology; relating to science and industry.
  • technomania — an obsessional enthusiasm for technology
  • technophile — a person who loves or is enthusiastic about advanced technology.
  • technophobe — abnormal fear of or anxiety about the effects of advanced technology.
  • technopolis — a society with a concentration of technology-based businesses or an emphasis on technology
  • technospeak — any abstruse technical jargon
  • telephoning — an apparatus, system, or process for transmission of sound or speech to a distant point, especially by an electric device.
  • telephonist — a telephone switchboard operator.
  • tennis shoe — a sports shoe with a rubber sole (usually pebbled) and a stitched canvas upper that laces over the instep.
  • tenorrhaphy — suture of a tendon.
  • tenterhooks — one of the hooks or bent nails that hold cloth stretched on a tenter.
  • teotihuacan — the ruins of an ancient Mesoamerican city in central Mexico, near Mexico City, that flourished a.d. c200–c750 and is the site of the pyramids of the Sun and Moon and of many temples, palaces, and dwellings.
  • tephromancy — the seeking of the future using ashes
  • tetrahedron — Geometry. a solid contained by four plane faces; a triangular pyramid.
  • the argonne — a wooded region of NE France: scene of major battles in both World Wars
  • the commune — the revolutionary government of Paris from 1792 to 1794
  • the cornish — the natives or inhabitants of Cornwall
  • the council — the local governing authority of a town, county, etc
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