6-letter words containing a, d, h
- gashed — Make a gash in; cut deeply.
- hacked — to place (something) on a hack, as for drying or feeding.
- haddie — (dialect) haddock.
- haddon — Alfred Cort [kawrt] /kɔrt/ (Show IPA), 1855–1940, English ethnologist, anthropologist, and writer.
- hadean — Classical Mythology. the underworld inhabited by departed souls. the god ruling the underworld; Pluto.
- hading — Geology. the angle between a fault plane and the vertical, measured perpendicular to the strike of the fault; complement of the dip.
- hadith — Islam. a traditional account of things said or done by Muhammad or his companions.
- hadjes — Plural form of hadje.
- hadlee — Sir Richard (John). born 1951, New Zealand cricketer: an all-rounder, he played in 86 test matches in which he took 431 wickets and scored 3124 runs
- hadley — Henry Kimball [kim-buh l] /ˈkɪm bəl/ (Show IPA), 1871–1937, U.S. composer and conductor.
- hadn't — had not
- hadron — any elementary particle that is subject to the strong interaction. Hadrons are subdivided into baryons and mesons.
- hafted — a handle, especially of a knife, sword, or dagger.
- hagdon — any of various oceanic birds of the North Atlantic coasts of Europe and America, especially the greater shearwater.
- hagged — haglike.
- hagrid — to afflict with worry, dread, need, or the like; torment.
- haiduk — one of a class of mercenary soldiers in 16th-century Hungary.
- hailed — to pour down on as or like hail: The plane hailed leaflets on the city.
- hairdo — the style in which a person's hair is cut, arranged, and worn; coiffure.
- haired — having hair of a specified kind (usually used in combination): dark-haired; long-haired.
- halide — a chemical compound in which one of the elements is a halogen.
- haloed — Also called nimbus. a geometric shape, usually in the form of a disk, circle, ring, or rayed structure, traditionally representing a radiant light around or above the head of a divine or sacred personage, an ancient or medieval monarch, etc.
- haloid — Also, halogenoid [hal-uh-juh-noid, hey-luh-] /ˈhæl ə dʒəˌnɔɪd, ˈheɪ lə-/ (Show IPA). resembling or derived from a halogen.
- halted — Simple past tense and past participle of halt.
- halved — Simple past tense and past participle of halve.
- hamada — a desert terrain that consists of a flat and rocky area mainly devoid of sand
- hamden — a town in S Connecticut.
- hammed — an actor or performer who overacts.
- handan — a city in SW Hebei province, China.
- handed — of, belonging to, using, or used by the hand.
- handel — George Frideric [free-der-ik,, -drik] /ˈfri dər ɪk,, -drɪk/ (Show IPA), (Georg Friedrich Händel) 1685–1759, German composer in England after 1712.
- hander — the terminal, prehensile part of the upper limb in humans and other primates, consisting of the wrist, metacarpal area, fingers, and thumb.
- handle — a part of a thing made specifically to be grasped or held by the hand.
- handly — Of or pertaining to the hand; manual.
- handsy — (informal) prone to touching other people with one's hands, especially inappropriately.
- hanged — to fasten or attach (a thing) so that it is supported only from above or at a point near its own top; suspend.
- hanked — a skein, as of thread or yarn.
- happed — a comforter or quilt.
- harald — 1937- ; king of Norway (1991- )
- harden — to make hard or harder: to harden steel.
- harder — Comparative form of hard.
- hardie — (James) Keir (kɪə). 1856–1915, British Labour leader and politician, born in Scotland; the first parliamentary leader of the Labour Party
- hardin — John Wesley, 1853–95, U.S. outlaw in the West.
- hardly — only just; almost not; barely: We had hardly reached the lake when it started raining. hardly any; hardly ever.
- hardon — an erection of the penis.
- hareld — The long-tailed duck, or oldsquaw.
- harked — to listen attentively; hearken.
- harmed — physical injury or mental damage; hurt: to do him bodily harm.
- harold — Duane, 1925–1996, U.S. artist and sculptor.
- harped — Simple past tense and past participle of harp.