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8-letter words containing a, r, n

  • hannover — a member of the royal family that ruled Great Britain under that name from 1714 to 1901.
  • hanratty — James. 1936–62, Englishman executed, despite conflicting evidence, for a murder on the A6 road. Subsequent public concern played a major part in the abolition of capital punishment in Britain. New DNA evidence led to an appeal by Hanratty's supporters being dismissed in 2002
  • hapteron — a structure by which a fungus, aquatic plant, or algae colony attaches to an object; a holdfast.
  • harangue — a scolding or a long or intense verbal attack; diatribe.
  • harappan — of or relating to Harappa, especially the Bronze Age culture of the Indus valley civilization.
  • hard-won — If you describe something that someone has gained or achieved as hard-won, you mean that they worked hard to gain or achieve it.
  • hardened — made or become hard or harder.
  • hardener — a person or thing that hardens.
  • hardinge — Henry, 1st Viscount Hardinge of Lahore. 1785–1856, British politician, soldier, and colonial administrator; governor general of India (1844–48)
  • hardline — an uncompromising or unyielding stand, especially in politics.
  • hardness — the state or quality of being hard: the hardness of ice.
  • hardnose — a person who is tough and uncompromising
  • haringey — a borough of Greater London, England.
  • harkened — Simple past tense and past participle of harken.
  • harknessEdward Stephan, 1874–1940, U.S. philanthropist.
  • harmalin — chemical derived from harmala
  • harmonia — the daughter of Ares and Aphrodite and wife of Cadmus.
  • harmonic — pertaining to harmony, as distinguished from melody and rhythm.
  • harpagon — (obsolete) a grappling hook.
  • harpings — any of several horizontal members at the ends of a vessel for holding cant frames in position until the shell planking or plating is attached.
  • harpoons — Plural form of harpoon.
  • harridan — a scolding, vicious woman; hag; shrew.
  • harrimanEdward Henry, 1848–1909, U.S. financier and railroad magnate.
  • harrisonBenjamin, 1726?–91, American political leader (father of William Henry Harrison).
  • harrying — to harass, annoy, or prove a nuisance to by or as if by repeated attacks; worry: He was harried by constant doubts.
  • harshing — Present participle of harsh.
  • hartline — Haldan Keffer [hawl-duh n kef-er] /ˈhɔl dən ˈkɛf ər/ (Show IPA), 1903–83, U.S. physiologist: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1967.
  • hartmann — (Karl Robert) Eduard von [kahrl roh-buh rt ey-doo-ahrt fuh n] /kɑrl ˈroʊ bərt ˈeɪ duˌɑrt fən/ (Show IPA), 1842–1906, German philosopher.
  • hartnell — Sir Norman. 1901–79, English couturier
  • harunobu — Suzuki [soo-zoo-kee] /sʊˈzu ki/ (Show IPA), 1720?–70, Japanese painter and printmaker.
  • hastener — Agent noun of hasten; one who hastens.
  • hauriant — (of a fish) represented as erect, with the head upward: a dolphin hauriant.
  • havering — a borough of Greater London, England.
  • hawthorn — any of numerous plants belonging to the genus Crataegus, of the rose family, typically a small tree with stiff thorns, certain North American species of which have white or pink blossoms and bright-colored fruits and are cultivated in hedges.
  • headring — an African head decoration and symbol of maturity
  • hearings — Plural form of hearing.
  • hearkens — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of hearken.
  • hearsing — Present participle of hearse.
  • heartens — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of hearten.
  • hearting — Present participle of heart.
  • herdsman — a herder; the keeper of a herd, especially of cattle or sheep.
  • hermaean — denoting or relating to a herm
  • herniate — to protrude abnormally from an enclosed cavity or from the body so as to constitute a hernia.
  • hernshaw — a heron.
  • herodian — of or relating to Herod the Great, his family, or its partisans.
  • herrmannBernard, 1911–75, U.S. conductor and composer.
  • hibernal — of or relating to winter; wintry.
  • hibernia — Ireland.
  • hindward — backward
  • hiragana — the cursive and more widely used of the two Japanese syllabaries.
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