8-letter words containing e, n, h, a, r
- encharge — (obsolete, transitive) To give to somebody as a charge; to entrust with a duty or task.
- encroach — Intrude on (a person's territory or a thing considered to be a right).
- endarchy — a central government
- enhancer — Something that enhances.
- enhearse — to put into a hearse, to bury
- enravish — to enchant
- enthrall — Capture the fascinated attention of.
- enthrals — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of enthral.
- enwreath — Misspelling of enwreathe.
- ethnarch — (historical, Ancient Greece) The governor of a province or people.
- fernshaw — a thicket of ferns
- forehand — (in tennis, squash, etc.) of, relating to, or noting a stroke made from the same side of the body as that of the hand holding the racket, paddle, etc. Compare backhand (def 5).
- freehand — drawn or executed by hand without guiding instruments, measurements, or other aids: a freehand map.
- freshman — a student in the first year of the course at a university, college, or high school.
- genearch — a chief of a family or tribe.
- gnashers — Plural form of gnasher.
- graphene — A fullerene consisting of bonded carbon atoms in sheet form one atom thick.
- grenache — a variety of grape used in winemaking, especially for table wines in the Rhône Valley of France and for a type of rosé in California.
- groaneth — Archaic third-person singular form of groan.
- habanera — a dance of Cuban origin.
- habanero — an extremely pungent small pepper, the fruit of a variety of Capsicum chinense, used in cookery.
- hair net — a cap of loose net, as of silk or nylon, for holding the hair in place.
- hairline — a very slender line.
- hairnets — Plural form of hairnet.
- handlers — Plural form of handler.
- handover — the act of relinquishing property, authority, etc.: a handover of occupied territory.
- hangared — a shed or shelter.
- hangfire — a delay in the detonation of gunpowder or other ammunition, caused by some defect in the fuze.
- hangover — the disagreeable physical aftereffects of drunkenness, such as a headache or stomach disorder, usually felt several hours after cessation of drinking.
- hankered — to have a restless or incessant longing (often followed by after, for, or an infinitive).
- hankerer — A person who hankers.
- hannover — a member of the royal family that ruled Great Britain under that name from 1714 to 1901.
- 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.
- 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.
- harkness — Edward Stephan, 1874–1940, U.S. philanthropist.
- hartline — Haldan Keffer [hawl-duh n kef-er] /ˈhɔl dən ˈkɛf ər/ (Show IPA), 1903–83, U.S. physiologist: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1967.
- hartnell — Sir Norman. 1901–79, English couturier
- hastener — Agent noun of hasten; one who hastens.
- havering — a borough of Greater London, England.
- headring — an African head decoration and symbol of maturity
- hearings — Plural form of hearing.
- hearkens — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of hearken.