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9-letter words containing e, n, h, a, r

  • heartener — a person who cheers or heartens
  • heartikin — a term of endearment: 'little heart'
  • heartland — the part of a region considered essential to the viability and survival of the whole, especially a central land area relatively invulnerable to attack and capable of economic and political self-sufficiency.
  • heartling — a term of endearment, little heart
  • heartsink — a patient who repeatedly visits his or her doctor's surgery, often with multiple or non-specific symptoms, and whose complaints are impossible to treat
  • heathenry — The state of being heathen.
  • hebridean — a group of islands (Inner Hebrides and Outer Hebrides) off the W coast of and belonging to Scotland. About 2900 sq. mi. (7500 sq. km).
  • helengrad — a satirical name for Wellington as the seat of Helen Clark's socialist government from 1999 to 2008
  • hen party — a party or gathering for women only.
  • henrician — of or having to do with the reign, policies, etc. of any king named Henry, esp. Henry VIII of England
  • henrietta — a female given name, form of Henry.
  • heraklion — Iraklion
  • heralding — (formerly) a royal or official messenger, especially one representing a monarch in an ambassadorial capacity during wartime.
  • herculean — requiring the great strength of a Hercules; very hard to perform: Digging the tunnel was a herculean task.
  • hercynian — denoting a period of mountain building in Europe in the late Palaeozoic
  • heritance — inheritance.
  • hermandad — an informal police force in Spain
  • hernandez — José [haw-se] /hɔˈsɛ/ (Show IPA), 1834–86, Argentine poet.
  • herniated — to protrude abnormally from an enclosed cavity or from the body so as to constitute a hernia.
  • herodians — of or relating to Herod the Great, his family, or its partisans.
  • heronshaw — a heron
  • hesperian — western; occidental.
  • hesternal — (rare) Of or pertaining to yesterday.
  • hexameron — hexaemeron.
  • hibernate — Zoology. to spend the winter in close quarters in a dormant condition, as bears and certain other animals. Compare estivate.
  • hibernian — of, relating to, or characteristic of Ireland or its inhabitants; Irish.
  • hillermanTony, 1925–2008, U.S. novelist and anthropologist.
  • hindrance — an impeding, stopping, preventing, or the like.
  • hirudinea — the class comprising the leeches.
  • hitlerian — of or relating to Adolf Hitler or his regime
  • hoariness — The characteristic of being hoary.
  • hoarsened — Simple past tense and past participle of hoarsen.
  • hoarstone — A stone designating the bounds of an estate; a landmark.
  • hodiernal — (rare) Of or pertaining to the current day.
  • hollanderJohn, 1929–2013, U.S. poet and critic.
  • honeytrap — A stratagem in which irresistible bait is used to lure a victim.
  • honorable — in accordance with or characterized by principles of honor; upright: They were all honorable men.
  • hornbeams — Plural form of hornbeam.
  • hornyhead — species of fish
  • hortensia — Hydrangea.
  • humanizer — to make humane, kind, or gentle.
  • hundredal — Of or pertaining to a hundred (administrative unit).
  • hurricane — a violent, tropical, cyclonic storm of the western North Atlantic, having wind speeds of or in excess of 72 miles per hour (32 m/sec). Compare tropical cyclone, typhoon.
  • husbander — A person who husbands resources.
  • hybernate — Obsolete spelling of hibernate.
  • hydramine — an amine derived from a glycol in which one hydroxyl is replaced by an amino group.
  • hydrangea — any shrub belonging to the genus Hydrangea, of the saxifrage family, several species of which are cultivated for their large, showy flower clusters of white, pink, or blue.
  • hydrazine — Also called diamine. a colorless, oily, fuming liquid, N 2 H 4 , that is a weak base in solution and forms a large number of salts resembling ammonium salts: used chiefly as a reducing agent and a jet-propulsion fuel.
  • hydrazone — any of a class of compounds containing the group >C=NNH 2 .
  • hydrovane — a vane on a seaplane conferring stability on water (a sponson) or facilitating take off (a hydrofoil)
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