0%

10-letter words containing t, o, h, a

  • peashooter — a tube through which dried peas, beans, or small pellets are blown, used as a toy.
  • pentachord — a series of five consecutive notes of a scale
  • pentathlon — an athletic contest comprising five different track and field events and won by the contestant gaining the highest total score.
  • petrograph — petroglyph.
  • petrolhead — a person who is excessively interested in or is devoted to travelling by car
  • phagocytic — any cell, as a macrophage, that ingests and destroys foreign particles, bacteria, and cell debris.
  • phallocrat — a male who assumes authority over females due to his maleness
  • phantomish — resembling or reminiscent of a phantom
  • phenolated — containing phenol; carbolated.
  • phenoplast — phenolic resin.
  • philomathy — an enjoyment of and passion for learning new facts and acquiring new knowledge
  • phonematic — phonemic.
  • phonetical — Also, phonetical. of or relating to speech sounds, their production, or their transcription in written symbols.
  • phosphatic — of, relating to, or containing phosphates: phosphatic slag.
  • photically — in a photic manner, by way of photic processes
  • photoaging — damage to the skin, as wrinkles or discoloration, caused by prolonged exposure to sunlight.
  • photodrama — photoplay.
  • photoflash — flashbulb.
  • photograph — a picture produced by photography.
  • photomural — a wall decoration consisting of a very large photograph or photographs.
  • photonasty — a nastic movement in response to a change in light intensity
  • photopathy — movement of an organism in response to the intensity of light, especially away from the source of light.
  • photophase — a phase of light in a cycle of light and dark
  • phototaxis — movement of an organism toward or away from a source of light.
  • phyllotaxy — the arrangement of leaves on a stem or axis.
  • physiocrat — one of a school of political economists who followed Quesnay in holding that an inherent natural order properly governed society, regarding land as the basis of wealth and taxation, and advocating a laissez-faire economy.
  • phytoplasm — protoplasm of a plant or plants.
  • pictograph — pictogram
  • pina cloth — a fine, sheer fabric of pineapple-leaf fiber, used especially for lingerie.
  • pitchwoman — a female pitchman
  • plate shop — a shop for cold-forming metal plates.
  • ploughgate — a measurement of ploughable land
  • pocahontas — (Rebecca Rolfe) 1595?–1617, American Indian woman who is said to have prevented the execution of Captain John Smith.
  • pohutukawa — a myrtaceous New Zealand tree, Metrosideros excelsa, with red flowers and hard red wood
  • polyanthus — a hybrid primrose, Primula polyantha.
  • polychaete — any annelid of the class Polychaeta, having unsegmented swimming appendages with many setae or bristles.
  • polyhalite — a type or pink or red mineral
  • polymathic — a person of great learning in several fields of study; polyhistor.
  • poppethead — a tailstock or headstock of a lathe.
  • post-haste — with the greatest possible speed or promptness: to come to a friend's aid posthaste.
  • postlaunch — relating to or occurring in the period after a launch
  • prognathic — having protrusive jaws; having a gnathic index over 103.
  • promethean — of or suggestive of Prometheus.
  • prothallus — prothallium.
  • protohuman — of, relating to, or resembling extinct hominid populations that had some but not all the features of modern Homo sapiens.
  • psychopath — a person with a psychopathic personality, which manifests as amoral and antisocial behavior, lack of ability to love or establish meaningful personal relationships, extreme egocentricity, failure to learn from experience, etc.
  • push about — to bully; keep telling (a person) what to do in a bossy manner
  • pyrrophyta — a phylum in the kingdom Protista comprising the dinoflagellates and cryptomonads.
  • pythagoras — c582–c500 b.c, Greek philosopher, mathematician, and religious reformer.
  • rachiotomy — (surgery) The surgical procedure of cutting, or making an incision in a vertebra.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?