10-letter words that end in sh
- fetterbush — an evergreen shrub, Lyonia lucida, of the heath family, native to the southern U.S., having clusters of fragrant, white flowers.
- flapperish — in the style of a flapper
- flue brush — a brush used for cleaning soot from chimneys
- flunkeyish — resembling a flunkey
- flyingfish — any of a family (Exocoetidae, order Atheriniformes) of chiefly warm-water, marine bony fishes with winglike pectoral fins that enable them to glide through the air
- folklorish — (colloquial) Typical or similar to folklore.
- four flush — a useless poker hand, containing four of a suit and one odd card
- four-flush — to bluff.
- fruit dish — plate or bowl for displaying fruit
- gargoylish — Of, pertaining to, or resembling a gargoyle.
- gate-crash — to gain entry to (a party, concert, etc) without invitation or payment
- genteelish — genteel-like
- glory bush — a shrub, Tibouchina urvilleana, native to Brazil, having showy purple flowers, cultivated as an ornamental.
- gooseflesh — goose bumps.
- gorse bush — a gorse plant
- griffinish — indicative of a griffin, being a newcomer to the Orient
- groundfish — (fishing) Fish that swim near the seafloor.
- guitarfish — any sharklike ray of the family Rhinobatidae, of warm seas, resembling a guitar in shape.
- hackintosh — 1. (jargon, computer) An Apple Lisa that has been hacked into emulating a Macintosh (also called a "Mac XL"). 2. (jargon, computer) A Macintosh assembled from parts theoretically belonging to different models in the line.
- hard crash — (programming) When a program stops running completely and unexpectedly, often due to external events, e.g. the CPU overheating or an unrecoverable memory error. See also disk crash.
- heathenish — of or relating to heathens: heathenish practices of idolatry.
- hidalgoish — resembling a hidalgo
- hindu kush — a mountain range in S Asia, mostly in NE Afghanistan, extending W from the Himalayas. Highest peak, Tirich Mir, 25,230 feet (7690 meters).
- hipsterish — Like a hipster; (often pretentiously) trendy.
- hobblebush — a North American shrub, Viburnum alnifolium, of the honeysuckle family, having flat-topped clusters of white flowers and red-to-black berrylike fruit.
- hoodlumish — like a hoodlum
- horseflesh — the flesh of a horse.
- impoverish — to reduce to poverty: a country impoverished by war.
- in a flash — very quickly, in an instant
- lancetfish — any large, marine fish of the genus Alepisaurus, having daggerlike teeth.
- lemon fish — the cobia.
- lizardfish — any of several large-mouthed fishes of the family Synodontidae, having a lizardlike head.
- macintrash — /mak'in-trash"/ The Apple Macintosh, as described by a hacker who doesn"t appreciate being kept away from the *real computer* by the interface. The term maggotbox has been reported in regular use in the Research Triangle area of North Carolina. Compare Macintoy. See also beige toaster, WIMP environment, point-and-drool interface, drool-proof paper, user-friendly.
- mackintosh — Charles Rennie [ren-ee] /ˈrɛn i/ (Show IPA), 1868–1928, Scottish architect and designer.
- madonnaish — resembling a Madonna
- malnourish — Lb transitive To feed insufficiently, to cause malnutrition.
- medusafish — a stromateid fish, Icichthys lockingtoni, of deep waters off the coast of California, living as a commensal in and about medusas.
- monogamish — Mostly monogamous, but allowing for occasional infidelities.
- more-welsh — of or relating to Wales, its people, or their language.
- multiflash — (of a photographic image) created using several flashes in quick succession in order to depict the successive stages of a movement or action sequence
- muttonfish — ocean pout.
- nail brush — small brush for cleaning finger- and toe-nails
- nappy rash — If a baby has nappy rash, the skin under its nappy is red and sore.
- needlefish — any fish of the family Belonidae, of warm seas and coastal fresh waters, having a sharp beak and needlelike teeth.
- nettlefish — jellyfish.
- news flash — flash (def 6).
- non-jewish — not practising Judaism
- ogden nash — John, 1752–1835, English architect and city planner.
- old danish — the Danish language as spoken and written from the 9th to the 14th centuries.
- old-siwash — a conventional designation for any small, provincial college or for such colleges collectively (often preceded by old): students from old Siwash.