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

  • stairhead — the top of a staircase; top landing.
  • stanchest — staunch2 .
  • starshine — starlight
  • statehood — the status or condition of being a state, especially a state of the U.S.
  • stathenry — the electrostatic unit of inductance, equivalent to 8.9876 × 10 11 henries and equal to the inductance of a circuit in which an electromotive force of one statvolt is produced by a current in the circuit which varies at the rate of one statampere per second.
  • stauncher — firm or steadfast in principle, adherence, loyalty, etc., as a person: a staunch Republican; a staunch friend.
  • steamship — a large commercial vessel, especially one driven by steam.
  • stechhelm — a heavy German jousting helm of the 15th and 16th centuries, having a bluntly pointed front with a V -shaped vision slit.
  • steelhead — a silvery rainbow trout that migrates to the sea before returning to fresh water to spawn.
  • steerhide — the hide of a steer.
  • stenchful — malodorous; foul-smelling
  • stenobath — a stenobathic organism.
  • stepchair — a set of steps folding into a chair.
  • stepchild — a child of one's spouse by a previous marriage.
  • stephanie — a female given name.
  • stephen iSaint, died a.d. 257? pope 254–257.
  • stephen v — died a.d. 891, pope 885–891.
  • sticheron — a liturgical hymn sung in the Orthodox Church
  • stitchery — needlework.
  • stokehold — Also, stokehold [stohk-hohld] /ˈstoʊkˌhoʊld/ (Show IPA). fireroom.
  • stokehole — Also, stokehold [stohk-hohld] /ˈstoʊkˌhoʊld/ (Show IPA). fireroom.
  • stomacher — a richly ornamented garment covering the stomach and chest, worn by both sexes in the 15th and 16th centuries, and later worn under a bodice by women.
  • stonechat — any of several small Old World birds, especially of the genus Saxicola, as S. torquata.
  • stonefish — a tropical scorpion fish, Synanceja verrucosa, having dorsal-fin spines from which a deadly poison is discharged.
  • stonehand — a person who arranges type and imposes pages on an imposing stone
  • stoneshot — a stone's throw or the distance a person can throw a stone
  • stonewash — to wash (cloth) with pebbles or stones so as to give the appearance of wear.
  • storeship — a government-owned ship that carries supplies to a naval fleet
  • stourhead — a Palladian mansion near Mere in Wiltshire: built (1722) for Henry Hoare; famous for its landscaped gardens laid out (1741) by Flitcroft
  • streicher — Julius. 1885–1946, German Nazi journalist and politician, who spread anti-Semitic propaganda as editor of Der Stürmer (1923–45). He was hanged as a war criminal
  • stretched — to draw out or extend (oneself, a body, limbs, wings, etc.) to the full length or extent (often followed by out): to stretch oneself out on the ground.
  • stretcher — an act or instance of stretching.
  • stretchie — an infant's one-piece garment covering the torso, legs, and feet, made of stretch fabric.
  • struthers — a city in NE Ohio, near Youngstown.
  • studhorse — a stallion kept for breeding.
  • sublethal — almost lethal or fatal: a sublethal dose of poison.
  • sulphuret — to treat or combine with sulphur
  • superheat — the state of being superheated.
  • superthin — extremely thin
  • sweatshop — a shop employing workers at low wages, for long hours, and under poor conditions.
  • sweetfish — a sweet-tasting omnivorous fish, native to Japan
  • sweetshop — a shop solely or largely selling sweets, esp boiled sweets
  • syntheses — the combining of the constituent elements of separate material or abstract entities into a single or unified entity (opposed to analysis, ) the separating of any material or abstract entity into its constituent elements.
  • synthesis — the combining of the constituent elements of separate material or abstract entities into a single or unified entity (opposed to analysis, ) the separating of any material or abstract entity into its constituent elements.
  • synthetic — of, pertaining to, proceeding by, or involving synthesis (opposed to analytic).
  • tabasheer — dried bamboo sap, used medicinally in the Far East
  • taoiseach — The prime minister of the Republic of Ireland is called the Taoiseach.
  • tap shoes — shoes worn by tap-dancers which are equipped with taps that make a rhythmic sound when the shoes are used for dancing
  • tarnished — metal: discolored
  • tea chest — A tea chest is a large wooden box in which tea is packed when it is exported. People also use tea chests for putting things in when they move from one house to another.
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