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

  • ermahgerd — (slang, humorous, or, sarcastic) non-gloss An exclamation of excitement, surprise, amazement, or shock.
  • exchanged — Simple past tense and past participle of exchange.
  • fraughted — Simple past tense and past participle of fraught.
  • freighted — goods, cargo, or lading transported for pay, whether by water, land, or air.
  • galumphed — Simple past tense and past participle of galumph.
  • garnished — Simple past tense and past participle of garnish.
  • gasholder — gasometer (def 2).
  • gateshead — a metropolitan borough in Tyne and Wear, in NE England: seaport on the Tyne River opposite Newcastle.
  • 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.
  • gelechiid — any of numerous small moths of the family Gelechiidae, including many crop pests, as the Angoumois grain moth and potato tuberworm.
  • get ahead — to receive or come to have possession, use, or enjoyment of: to get a birthday present; to get a pension.
  • giltheads — Plural form of gilthead.
  • give head — the upper part of the body in humans, joined to the trunk by the neck, containing the brain, eyes, ears, nose, and mouth.
  • gladsheim — the golden palace of Odin, of which Valhalla was a part.
  • glidepath — the course followed by an aircraft or spacecraft when descending for a landing.
  • goatherds — Plural form of goatherd.
  • godfather — a novel (1969) by Mario Puzo.
  • godmother — a woman who serves as sponsor for a child at baptism.
  • good hope — Cape of Good Hope.
  • gooseherd — a person who tends geese.
  • gorehound — an enthusiast of gory horror films
  • gottsched — Johann Christoph. 1700–66, German critic, dramatist, and translator
  • graphited — Modified by the addition of graphite.
  • greenhand — an inexperienced person, esp a sailor
  • greenhead — a male mallard.
  • 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
  • gypsyhead — a flanged drum on a winch, for winding in lines.
  • hagridden — worried or tormented, as by a witch.
  • harangued — a scolding or a long or intense verbal attack; diatribe.
  • hard-edge — of, relating to, or characteristic of a style of abstract painting associated with the 1960s and marked chiefly by sharply outlined geometric or nongeometric forms.
  • hardanger — embroidery openwork having elaborate symmetrical designs created by blocks of satin stitches within which threads of the embroidery fabric are removed.
  • hardening — a material that hardens another, as an alloy added to iron to make steel.
  • head game — effort to confuse or delude sb
  • head gate — a control gate at the upstream end of a canal or lock.
  • head girl — The head girl of a school is the girl who is the leader of the prefects and who often represents the school on public occasions.
  • headguard — a padded helmet worn to protect the head in contact sports such as rugby and boxing
  • headlight — a light or lamp, usually equipped with a reflector, on the front of an automobile, locomotive, etc.
  • headright — Law. a beneficial interest for each member of an Indian tribe in the tribal trust fund accruing from the lease of tribal oil, gas, and mineral rights, the sale of tribal lands, etc.
  • hedgebill — a tool for pruning a hedge
  • hedgehogs — Plural form of hedgehog.
  • hedgehops — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of hedgehop.
  • hedgeless — Without hedges.
  • hedgerows — Plural form of hedgerow.
  • hedgingly — So as to hedge; without making a firm commitment.
  • heideggerMartin, 1889–1976, German philosopher and writer.
  • helengrad — a satirical name for Wellington as the seat of Helen Clark's socialist government from 1999 to 2008
  • helgoland — a German island in the North Sea. ¼ sq. mi. (0.6 sq. km).
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