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11-letter words containing w, h, e

  • handwritten — to write (something) by hand.
  • hardwareman — (obsolete) An ironmonger.
  • hardwearing — resistant to extensive wear; durable: a pair of hardwearing jeans.
  • harrow hell — to enter hell and rescue the righteous
  • hawaii time — Alaska-Hawaii time.
  • hawes water — a lake in NW England, in the Lake District: provides part of Manchester's water supply; extended by damming from 4 km (2.5 miles) to 6 km (4 miles)
  • hawkishness — resembling a hawk, as in appearance or behavior.
  • hawser bend — a knot uniting the ends of two lines.
  • hawser-laid — cablelaid (def 1).
  • head waiter — a person in charge of waiters, busboys, etc., in a restaurant or dining car.
  • head-waiter — a person in charge of waiters, busboys, etc., in a restaurant or dining car.
  • headwaiters — Plural form of headwaiter.
  • heart-water — a tick-borne disease of cattle, sheep, and goats characterized by fluid accumulation in the pericardial sac. It is caused by the organism Rickettsia ruminantium
  • heart-whole — not in love.
  • heavenwards — Also, heavenwards. toward heaven.
  • heavy water — water in which hydrogen atoms have been replaced by deuterium, used chiefly as a coolant in nuclear reactors.
  • heavyweight — heavy in weight.
  • heir at law — a person who inherits, or has a right of inheritance in, the real property of one who has died without leaving a valid will.
  • heir-at-law — a person who inherits, or has a right of inheritance in, the real property of one who has died without leaving a valid will.
  • hem and haw — the utterance or sound of “hem.”.
  • hence with! — away with!
  • henry's law — the principle that at a constant temperature the concentration of a gas dissolved in a fluid with which it does not combine chemically is almost directly proportional to the partial pressure of the gas at the surface of the fluid.
  • hepplewhiteGeorge, died 1786, English furniture designer and cabinetmaker.
  • here we are — You say 'here we are' when you have just found something that you have been looking for.
  • here's how! — (as a toast) good health!
  • hereinbelow — afterward in this document, statement, etc.
  • high blower — a horse that produces a blowing sound when exhaling.
  • high yellow — a term used to refer to a light-skinned black person.
  • hill walker — a person who takes part in hill walking
  • hinshelwoodSir Cyril Norman, 1897–1967, English chemist: Nobel Prize 1956.
  • hitherwards — (archaic) Toward this place.
  • hollow tile — tile (def 5).
  • hollow-eyed — having sunken eyes.
  • holy willie — a person who is hypocritically pious
  • home waters — territorial waters
  • homeworkers — Plural form of homeworker.
  • homeworking — Working from home, especially when in electronic contact with a central office.
  • homewrecker — One who is blamed for the breakup of a marriage or family, such as an adulterous partner.
  • honey wagon — a wagon or truck for collecting and carrying excrement or manure.
  • honey-sweet — sweet as honey.
  • hooded crow — a European crow, Corvus corone cornix, having a gray body and black head, wings, and tail.
  • hoodie crow — a subspecies of the carrion crow, Corvus corone cornix, that has a grey body and black head, wings, and tail
  • hooke's law — the law stating that the stress on a solid substance is directly proportional to the strain produced, provided the stress is less than the elastic limit of the substance.
  • hornswoggle — to swindle, cheat, hoodwink, or hoax.
  • horse-drawn — A horse-drawn carriage, cart, or other vehicle is one that is pulled by one or more horses.
  • house owner — A house owner is a person who owns a house.
  • house white — a white wine sold unnamed by a restaurant, at a lower price than wines specified on the wine list
  • housewifely — of, like, or befitting a housewife.
  • housewifery — the function or work of a housewife; housekeeping.
  • houseworker — a paid employee in a home, as a maid or cook.
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