6-letter words containing a, h
- gaucho — a native cowboy of the South American pampas, usually of mixed Spanish and Indian ancestry.
- gayish — Somewhat gay; gay to a certain extent.
- geisha — a Japanese woman trained as a professional singer, dancer, and companion for men.
- getcha — (colloquial) Contraction of
- gharri — a horse-drawn cab or carriage used in India and Egypt.
- gharry — a horse-drawn cab or carriage used in India and Egypt.
- ghauts — Plural form of ghaut.
- ghazal — (in Middle Eastern and Indian literature and music) a lyric poem with a fixed number of verses and a repeated rhyme, typically on the theme of love, and normally set to music.
- ghazis — Plural form of ghazi.
- ghazwa — (Islam) Any of the battles in which the Islamic prophet Muhammad personally participated.
- gherao — (India) A protest in which a group of people surrounds a politician, building, etc. until demands are met.
- gorham — a town in SW Maine.
- gotcha — I have got you (used to express satisfaction at having captured or defeated someone or uncovered their faults).
- gotham — a journalistic nickname for New York City.
- graham — made of graham flour.
- graith — equipment; apparatus; belongings
- granth — the sacred scripture of the Sikhs, original text compiled 1604.
- graphs — Plural form of graph.
- guache — Alternative spelling of gouache.
- gubbah — a white person.
- gullah — a member of a population of black Americans inhabiting the Sea Islands and the coastal regions of South Carolina, Georgia, and northeastern Florida.
- gunyah — an aboriginal hut or shelter.
- gurkha — a member of a Rajput people, Hindu in religion, who achieved dominion over Nepal in the 18th century.
- gurrah — a type of coarse Indian muslin
- h-back — a wingback or slotback
- h-beam — an I-beam having flanges the same width as its web, or connecting vertical section.
- habana — Havana.
- habeas — (legal) Shortened form of habeas corpus.
- habile — skillful; dexterous; adroit.
- habima — a Hebrew-language theater company, founded in Moscow in 1917: now the national theater of Israel.
- habiru — a nomadic people mentioned in Assyro-Babylonian literature: possibly the early Hebrews.
- habits — Plural form of habit.
- haboob — a thick dust storm or sandstorm that blows in the deserts of North Africa and Arabia or on the plains of India.
- hacked — to place (something) on a hack, as for drying or feeding.
- hackee — (US, dialect) The chickaree or red squirrel.
- hacker — a person, as an artist or writer, who exploits, for money, his or her creative ability or training in the production of dull, unimaginative, and trite work; one who produces banal and mediocre work in the hope of gaining commercial success in the arts: As a painter, he was little more than a hack.
- hackie — hack2 (def 7b).
- hackle — one of the long, slender feathers on the neck or saddle of certain birds, as the domestic rooster, much used in making artificial flies for anglers.
- hackly — rough or jagged, as if hacked: Some minerals break with a hackly fracture.
- 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.
- haemal — Pertaining to the blood or blood vessels.