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7-letter words containing a, e, o

  • hoarded — a supply or accumulation that is hidden or carefully guarded for preservation, future use, etc.: a vast hoard of silver.
  • hoarder — a supply or accumulation that is hidden or carefully guarded for preservation, future use, etc.: a vast hoard of silver.
  • hoarier — Comparative form of hoary.
  • hoarsen — (transitive, intransitive) To make or become hoarse.
  • hoarser — Comparative form of hoarse.
  • hoaxers — Plural form of hoaxer.
  • hoaxter — Alternative spelling of hoaxer.
  • hobbema — Meindert [mahyn-duh rt] /ˈmaɪn dərt/ (Show IPA), 1638–1709, Dutch painter.
  • hodeida — a city in W Yemen, on the Red Sea.
  • hoecake — an unleavened cake made with flour or corn meal: originally baked on a hoe but now usually cooked on a griddle.
  • hoghead — Also called hoghead. Railroads Slang. a locomotive engineer.
  • hogmane — a horse's mane that has been cut short so that it stands up stiffly
  • hollaed — Simple past tense and past participle of holla.
  • homaged — Simple past tense and past participle of homage.
  • homager — a vassal.
  • homages — Plural form of homage.
  • homepna — Home Phoneline Networking Alliance
  • hommage — A homage, especially something in an artwork which has been done in respectful imitation of another artist.
  • hophead — a narcotics addict, especially an opium addict.
  • hosebag — (slang) An undesirable, boorish, unintelligent, or objectionable person; often used in jest; a hoser.
  • hoseman — a fireman
  • hostage — a person given or held as security for the fulfillment of certain conditions or terms, promises, etc., by another.
  • hotcake — A pancake.
  • hothead — an impetuous or short-tempered person.
  • hoylake — a town and resort in NW England, in Wirral unitary authority, Merseyside, on the Irish Sea. Pop: 25 524 (2001)
  • hypogea — Ancient Architecture. the underground part of a building, as a vault.
  • iceboat — a vehicle for rapid movement on ice, usually consisting of a T -shaped frame on three runners driven by a fore-and-aft sailing rig or, sometimes, by an engine operating a propeller.
  • ideator — One who ideates; one who holds or generates an idea, or synthesizes a concept.
  • iobates — a Lycian king commissioned by his son-in-law, Proetus, to kill Bellerophon: after surviving ordeals designed to destroy him, Bellerophon was believed to be divinely protected, and Iobates gave him half his kingdom.
  • iodates — Plural form of iodate.
  • ipomoea — any plant belonging to the genus Ipomoea, of the morning glory family, certain species of which are cultivated for their large, showy flowers.
  • isadore — a male given name: from the Greek word meaning “gift of Isis.”.
  • isagoge — an introduction, especially a scholarly introduction to a field of study or research.
  • isobare — Meteorology. a line drawn on a weather map or chart that connects points at which the barometric pressure is the same.
  • isobase — a line on a chart or map that connects points of equal land upheaval
  • isolate — to set or place apart; detach or separate so as to be alone.
  • isolead — a curved line on a ballistic graph that is used to calculate the trajectory required in order to hit a moving target
  • ivanhoe — a novel (1819) by Sir Walter Scott.
  • jaconet — a cotton fabric of light weight, usually finished as cambric, lawn, organdy, voile, etc., used in the manufacture of clothing and bandages.
  • jagello — a member of a dynasty ruling in Bohemia, Hungary, Lithuania, and Poland in the 14th to 16th centuries.
  • jalouse — (Scotland) To suspect.
  • jambone — a lone hand in euchre that is played while a player's cards are exposed on the table
  • jamesonSir Leander Starr [stahr] /stɑr/ (Show IPA), ("Doctor Jameson") 1853–1917, Scottish physician and statesman: colonial administrator in South Africa.
  • jawbone — a bone of either jaw; a maxilla or mandible.
  • jawhole — a hole into which sewage or waste water is thrown
  • jawrope — a rope tied across the jaw of a gaff to hold it to the mast.
  • jealous — feeling resentment against someone because of that person's rivalry, success, or advantages (often followed by of): He was jealous of his rich brother.
  • jehovah — a name of God in the Old Testament, a rendering of the ineffable name, JHVH, in the Hebrew Scriptures.
  • jeofail — an oversight in a legal pleading
  • jeopard — to jeopardize.
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