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10-letter words containing u, r, i, a, h

  • kurdaitcha — (Australia) An aboriginal evil spirit; a sorcerer.
  • languisher — One who languishes.
  • lauderhill — a city in SE Florida: suburb of Fort Lauderdale.
  • loudhailer — (British) A megaphone or bullhorn.
  • malnourish — Lb transitive To feed insufficiently, to cause malnutrition.
  • manchurian — a historic region in NE China: ancestral home of the Manchu. About 413,000 sq. mi. (1,070,000 sq. km).
  • nail brush — small brush for cleaning finger- and toe-nails
  • nudibranch — a shell-less, marine snail of the suborder Nudibranchia, having external, often branched respiratory appendages on the back and sides.
  • orichalcum — a brass rich in zinc, prepared by the ancients.
  • paintbrush — a brush for applying paint, as one used in painting houses or one used in painting pictures.
  • parachutic — involving a parachute
  • pasticheur — a person who makes, composes, or concocts a pastiche.
  • pubic hair — hair growing in genital area
  • purchasing — buying
  • quad right — (in computer typesetting) flush right.
  • re-hauling — to pull or draw with force; move by drawing; drag: They hauled the boat up onto the beach.
  • rehumanize — to make humane, kind, or gentle.
  • rheumatics — pertaining to or of the nature of rheumatism.
  • rheumatism — any disorder of the extremities or back, characterized by pain and stiffness.
  • rheumatoid — resembling rheumatism.
  • rightabout — the position assumed by turning about to the right so as to face in the opposite direction.
  • ruffianish — like a ruffian
  • sea urchin — any echinoderm of the class Echinoidea, having a somewhat globular or discoid form, and a shell composed of many calcareous plates covered with projecting spines.
  • shin guard — a protective covering, usually of leather or plastic and often padded, for the shins and sometimes the knees, worn chiefly by catchers in baseball and goalkeepers in ice hockey.
  • squarishly — in a squarish manner
  • squirarchy — squirearchy.
  • squirearch — a member of the squirearchy.
  • thiouracil — a white, slightly water-soluble, bitter, crystalline powder C 4 H 4 N 2 OS, used chiefly in treating hyperthyroidism by reducing the activity of the thyroid gland.
  • thunbergia — any of various plants, vines, or shrubs belonging to the genus Thunbergia, of the acanthus family, native to Africa and southern Asia, having variously colored flowers and often cultivated as ornamentals in warm regions.
  • thuringian — a state in central Germany. 5985 sq. mi. (15,550 sq. km) Capital: Erfurt.
  • trachelium — (in classical architecture) any member between the hypotrachelium and the capital of a column.
  • triumphant — having achieved victory or success; victorious; successful.
  • uintathere — any hoofed North American mammal of the extinct genus Dinoceras, of the Eocene Epoch, having a massive body and three pairs of horns.
  • ultra-chic — attractive and fashionable; stylish: a chic hat.
  • ultrafiche — a form of microfiche with the images greatly reduced in size, generally by a factor of 100 or more.
  • ultralight — extremely lightweight in comparison with others of its kind: a car with an ultralight engine.
  • ultraright — of or belonging to the extreme political Right; extremely conservative or reactionary.
  • unactorish — not resembling or characteristic of actors or acting
  • unadhering — to stay attached; stick fast; cleave; cling (usually followed by to): The mud adhered to his shoes.
  • unbirthday — any day other than one's birthday
  • unharmonic — pertaining to harmony, as distinguished from melody and rhythm.
  • unhireable — able to be hired; fit for hiring.
  • unravished — to rape (a woman).
  • uphillward — in an uphill direction
  • uriah heepUriah, Uriah Heep.
  • urographic — of or relating to urography
  • vanquisher — to conquer or subdue by superior force, as in battle.
  • whirlabout — a whirling around in a circle.
  • white amur — grass carp
  • xiphosuran — any chelicerate arthropod of the subclass Xiphosura, including the horseshoe crabs and many extinct forms
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