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8-letter words containing t, h, y, o

  • hylobate — Any of the genus Hylobates of gibbons.
  • hypnotee — a person being hypnotized
  • hypnotic — of or relating to hypnosis or hypnotism.
  • hypocist — a type of juice derived from the fruit of a plant which grows from the Cistus shrub
  • hypothec — Roman and Civil Law. a mortgage or security held by a creditor on the property of a debtor without possession of it, created either by agreement or by operation of law.
  • hystero- — indicating the uterus
  • hystoric — Nonstandard spelling of historic.
  • ichthyo- — indicating or relating to fishes
  • isohyets — Plural form of isohyet.
  • kyphotic — Relating to, or exhibiting, kyphosis.
  • lekythos — an oil jar having an ellipsoidal body, narrow neck, flanged mouth, curved handle extending from below the lip to the shoulder, and a narrow base terminating in a foot: used chiefly for ointments.
  • loch tay — a lake in central Scotland, in Stirling council area. Length: 23 km (14 miles)
  • methoxyl — containing the methoxy group.
  • monomyth — (mythology) a cyclical journey or quest undertaken by a mythical hero.
  • motherly — pertaining to, characteristic of, or befitting a mother; maternal: motherly solicitude.
  • mouthily — in a mouthy or bombastic manner
  • myopathy — any abnormality or disease of muscle tissue.
  • neophyte — a beginner or novice: He's a neophyte at chess.
  • octarchy — a government by eight persons.
  • olynthus — an ancient city in NE Greece, on the Chalcidice Peninsula.
  • onychite — a type of marble stone
  • orthoepy — the study of correct pronunciation.
  • phytonic — of or relating to a phyton
  • phytosis — a disease which is caused by a vegetable parasite, for example a fungus
  • plymouth — an island in the Leeward Islands, in the SE West Indies: a British crown colony. 39½ sq. mi. (102 sq. km). Capital: Plymouth.
  • polygoth — (language)   A distributed language integrating classes with a parallel block structure, including multiprocedures and fragments.
  • polymath — a person of great learning in several fields of study; polyhistor.
  • pythonic — prophetic; oracular.
  • rhyolite — a fine-grained igneous rock rich in silica: the volcanic equivalent of granite.
  • rothesay — a town in the Strathclyde region, on Bute island, in SW Scotland: resort; ruins of 11th-century castle.
  • smoothly — free from projections or unevenness of surface; not rough: smooth wood; a smooth road.
  • smothery — stifling; close: a smothery atmosphere.
  • soothsay — to foretell events; predict.
  • splotchy — marked or covered with splotches.
  • stomachy — paunchy; having a prominent stomach.
  • synthpop — popular music played with synthesizers and having light upbeat melodies and lyrics.
  • tally-ho — the cry of a participant at a hunt to encourage the hounds when the quarry is sighted
  • thankyou — If you refer to something as a thankyou for what someone has done for you, you mean that it is intended as a way of thanking them.
  • the holy — a sacred place
  • the only — being single or very few in number
  • the poky — prison
  • theodicy — a vindication of the divine attributes, particularly holiness and justice, in establishing or allowing the existence of physical and moral evil.
  • theogony — the origin of the gods.
  • theology — the field of study and analysis that treats of God and of God's attributes and relations to the universe; study of divine things or religious truth; divinity.
  • theonomy — the state of an individual or society that regards its own nature and norms as being in accord with the divine nature.
  • threnody — a poem, speech, or song of lamentation, especially for the dead; dirge; funeral song.
  • thymosin — a hormone, produced by the thymus gland, that promotes the development of T cells from stem cells.
  • thyrosis — any condition resulting from abnormal functioning of the thyroid gland.
  • thyroxin — Biochemistry. the thyroid gland hormone that regulates the metabolic rate of the body.
  • thyrsoid — having somewhat the form of a thyrsus.
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