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10-letter words that end in and

  • hinterland — Often, hinterlands. the remote or less developed parts of a country; back country: The hinterlands are usually much more picturesque than the urban areas.
  • hired hand — a hired laborer, especially on a farm or ranch; farm hand or ranch hand.
  • home brand — an item packaged and marketed under the brand name of a particular retailer, usually a large supermarket chain, rather than that of the manufacturer
  • home stand — a series of consecutive sports events, as baseball games, played in a team's own stadium.
  • ice island — a tabular iceberg in the arctic region.
  • indie band — an independent band
  • jormungand — Midgard serpent.
  • krugerrand — (sometimes lowercase) a one-ounce gold coin of the Republic of South Africa, equal to 25 rand: first issued in 1967.
  • la-la land — a state of being out of touch with reality.
  • lotus land — the land of the lotus-eaters, or any fabulous, dreamlike setting
  • magic wand — handheld stick for casting spells
  • magistrand — a fourth-year university student
  • mcpartlandMarian, 1918–2013, British jazz pianist and composer, in U.S. since 1946.
  • meadowland — an area or section of land that is a meadow or is used or kept as a meadow.
  • middlehand — the player on the dealer's right in a game with three players. Compare endhand, forehand (def 7).
  • mitterrand — François (Maurice Marie) [frahn-swa maw-rees ma-ree] /frɑ̃ˈswa mɔˈris maˈri/ (Show IPA), 1916–96, French political leader: president 1981–95.
  • modificand — a word that is modified, or qualified, by another. In red books, books is a modificand.
  • motherland — one's native land.
  • name brand — a well-known brand or trademark
  • name-brand — brand-name (def 1).
  • narrowband — Of or involving signals over a narrow range of frequencies.
  • nightstand — night table.
  • nuyts land — early name of a region on the southern coast in S Australia, discovered by the Dutch in 1626–27.
  • off-island — located or tending away from the shore of an island: an off-island current.
  • overexpand — to expand excessively
  • patchstand — a small tazza.
  • peary land — a peninsula in N Greenland, extending into the Arctic Ocean: Cape Morris Jesup is at its N end. 200 miles (320 km) long.
  • pig island — New Zealand
  • ploughland — land that is ploughed for growing crops
  • queensland — a state in NE Australia. 670,500 sq. mi. (1,736,595 sq. km). Capital: Brisbane.
  • ranch hand — an employee on a ranch
  • right-hand — on the right.
  • round hand — a style of handwriting in which the letters are round, full, and clearly separated.
  • salt gland — a gland, located in the head of seabirds and various marine mammals and reptiles, that secretes into the nasal passages the excess salt imbibed or ingested.
  • screenland — filmdom.
  • secondhand — not directly known or experienced; obtained from others or from books: Most of our knowledge is secondhand.
  • shadowland — a land or region of shadows, phantoms, unrealities, or uncertainties: the shadowland of imagination.
  • short-hand — a method of rapid handwriting using simple strokes, abbreviations, or symbols that designate letters, words, or phrases (distinguished from longhand).
  • silk gland — any of several glands, as in various insects and spiders, that secrete a viscid protein substance which hardens into silk on contact with air.
  • sleevehand — a sleeve's cuff or wristband
  • somaliland — a coastal region in E Africa, including Djibouti, Somalia, and the Ogaden part of Ethiopia.
  • spasm band — an old-time jazz band, flourishing especially in the late 19th century, the members of which used improvised instruments, as cigar boxes, barrels, kazoos, whistles, and jugs, and often marched in the street while performing.
  • steel band — a band, native to Trinidad and common in the West Indies, using steel drums cut to various heights and tuned to specific pitches.
  • stricklandWilliam, 1787–1854, U.S. architect and engineer.
  • sunderland — a seaport in Tyne and Wear, in NE England.
  • super band — the band of frequencies between 216 and 600 megahertz, used for cable television channels and Citizens Band.
  • sutherlandEarl Wilbur, Jr. 1915–74, U.S. biochemist: Nobel Prize in medicine 1971.
  • sweep hand — a hand, usually a second hand, centrally mounted with the minute and hour hands of a timepiece and reaching to the edge of the dial.
  • swing band — a band that plays swing jazz
  • talleyrand — (born Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord) Prince of Benevento 1754-1838; Fr. statesman & diplomat
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