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9-letter words containing d, h, u, e

  • devoureth — (archaic) Third-person singular present simple form of 'devour'.
  • disinhume — to disinter.
  • doghouses — Plural form of doghouse.
  • dollhouse — a miniature house the scale of children's dolls.
  • dosshouse — flophouse.
  • douchebag — a small syringe having detachable nozzles for fluid injections, used chiefly for vaginal lavage and for enemas.
  • doughface — a Northerner who sympathized with the South during the controversies over new territories and slavery before the Civil War.
  • doughlike — Resembling dough.
  • doughtier — Comparative form of doughty.
  • dovehouse — A dovecote.
  • draughted — a drawing, sketch, or design.
  • draughter — a drawing, sketch, or design.
  • drumheads — Plural form of drumhead.
  • duchesses — the wife or widow of a duke.
  • duckshove — to evade (responsibility or an issue)
  • duckwheat — India wheat.
  • dung heap — a heap of dung
  • duotheism — Belief in and worship in two deities, usually framed as a god and goddess of roughly equal power.
  • duotheist — A person who adheres to duotheism.
  • dust head — a habitual user of angel dust.
  • dustsheet — A large sheet which is draped over furniture as protection from dust.
  • dutch elm — a widely planted hybrid elm tree, Ulmus hollandica, with spreading branches and a short trunk
  • dutch hoe — a type of hoe in which the head consists of a two-edged cross-blade attached to two prongs or of a single pressing of this shape
  • dyushambe — a former name of Dushanbe.
  • echiuroid — any wormlike invertebrate of the phylum Echiuroidea, found in sand and mud of tropical and subtropical seas, having at the mouth a ciliated, often elongated prostomium.
  • edinburgh — a division of the United Kingdom in the N part of Great Britain. 30,412 sq. mi. (78,772 sq. km). Capital: Edinburgh.
  • elkhounds — Plural form of elkhound.
  • end house — the last house in a row, terrace, or street, from the viewpoint of the speaker
  • enshrouds — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of enshroud.
  • eunuchoid — Resembling a eunuch, typically in having reduced or indeterminate sexual characteristics.
  • euphausid — (zoology) Any member of the Euphausidae.
  • euthyroid — having a thyroid gland that functions normally
  • exhausted — Drained of one's physical or mental resources; very tired.
  • fluffhead — (pejorative) A silly or vacuous person; an airhead.
  • fraughted — Simple past tense and past participle of fraught.
  • furbished — to restore to freshness of appearance or good condition (often followed by up): to furbish a run-down neighborhood; to furbish up one's command of a foreign language.
  • furnished — to supply (a house, room, etc.) with necessary furniture, carpets, appliances, etc.
  • furthered — at or to a greater distance; farther: I'm too tired to go further.
  • galumphed — Simple past tense and past participle of galumph.
  • gazehound — one of any of several breeds of hounds, as the Afghan, borzoi, greyhound, Saluki, or whippet, that hunts by sighting the game rather than by scent.
  • gorehound — an enthusiast of gory horror films
  • grewhound — a greyhound
  • greyhound — one of a breed of tall, slender, short-haired dogs, noted for its keen sight and swiftness.
  • guideship — the position of a guide
  • gumshield — a plate or strip of soft waxy substance used by boxers to protect the teeth and gums
  • hacked up — (jargon, programming)   Sufficiently patched, kluged, and tweaked that the surgical scars are beginning to crowd out normal tissue (compare critical mass). Not all programs that are hacked become "hacked up"; if modifications are done with some eye to coherence and continued maintainability, the software may emerge better for the experience. Contrast hack up.
  • hackitude — (jargon)   An even sillier word for hackishness.
  • half-used — previously used or owned; secondhand: a used car.
  • harangued — a scolding or a long or intense verbal attack; diatribe.
  • harboured — a part of a body of water along the shore deep enough for anchoring a ship and so situated with respect to coastal features, whether natural or artificial, as to provide protection from winds, waves, and currents.
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