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10-letter words containing she

  • languishes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of languish.
  • lead sheet — a copy of a song containing the melody line, sometimes along with the lyrics and the notations indicating the harmonic structure.
  • lippershey — Hans. died ?1619, Dutch lens grinder, who built the first telescope
  • lumpfishes — Plural form of lumpfish.
  • lungfishes — Plural form of lungfish.
  • mainsheets — Plural form of mainsheet.
  • masherbrum — a mountain in N India, in the Himalayas. 25,660 feet (7821 meters).
  • milkfishes — Plural form of milkfish.
  • mishearing — Present participle of mishear.
  • mishmashes — Plural form of mishmash.
  • monkfishes — Plural form of monkfish.
  • moon shell — any marine gastropod of the family Naticidae, having a rounded, short-spired, smooth shell.
  • nanoshells — Plural form of nanoshell.
  • news-sheet — A news-sheet is a small newspaper that is usually printed and distributed in small quantities by a local political or social organization.
  • numbfishes — Plural form of numbfish.
  • octopusher — a person who plays octopush
  • open-shelf — open-stack.
  • pen pusher — pencil pusher.
  • pen-pusher — pencil pusher.
  • poop sheet — a circular, list of instructions, press release, etc., providing information about a particular subject.
  • publishers — a publishing company
  • refinisher — a person who professionally refinishes or restores buildings or antique furniture
  • scoresheet — a sheet of paper on which scores are recorded
  • she's jake — everything is under control
  • shear cell — A shear cell is a device for testing how a powder or particle mixture flows.
  • shear legs — shear (def 16).
  • shear stud — a stud that transfers shear stress between metal and concrete in composite structural members in which the stud is welded to the metal component
  • shear zone — Geology. a zone of closely spaced, approximately parallel faults or dispersed displacements.
  • shearwater — any of several long-winged petrels of the genus Puffinus that appear to shear the water with their wing tips when flying low.
  • sheathbill — either of two white sea birds, Chionis alba or C. minor, of the colder parts of the Southern Hemisphere: so called from the horny sheath covering the base of the upper bill.
  • sheathless — lacking a sheath or a covering
  • shebagging — the practice by a female passenger on public transport of placing a bag on the seat beside her, so denying it to another passenger
  • shed blood — to pour forth (water or other liquid), as a fountain.
  • sheep farm — place where sheep are raised
  • sheep race — a single-file walkway for sheep at the entrance to a sheep-dip
  • sheep tick — a wingless, bloodsucking, dipterous insect, Melophagus ovinus, that is parasitic on sheep.
  • sheep-fold — an enclosure for sheep.
  • sheepberry — a North American shrub or small tree, Viburnum lentago, of the honeysuckle family, having flat-topped clusters of small white flowers and edible, berrylike black drupes.
  • sheepishly — embarrassed or bashful, as by having done something wrong or foolish.
  • sheepshank — a kind of knot, hitch, or bend made on a rope to shorten it temporarily.
  • sheepshead — a deep-bodied, black-banded food fish, Archosargus probatocephalus, living along the Atlantic coast of the U.S.
  • sheeptrack — a small natural terrace on a hillside
  • sheet bend — a knot used esp for joining ropes of different sizes
  • sheet down — (of rain) to fall heavily in sheets
  • sheet feed — the part of a computer printer where sheets of paper can be inserted and are then fed through the machine one at a time
  • sheet film — a flat piece of film cut to a required size before being loaded into a camera.
  • sheet home — to tighten the sheets of (a square sail) until it is set as flat as possible
  • sheet pile — one of a number of piles, usually flat, driven side by side to retain earth, etc., or to prevent seepage into an excavation.
  • sheetmetal — metal in sheets or thin plates.
  • shelf life — the term or period during which a stored commodity remains effective, useful, or suitable for consumption: Many medicines have a very short shelf life.
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