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7-letter words containing e, n, h, a

  • larchen — Of or pertaining to the larch tree.
  • lehenga — A long Indian skirt usually worn with a choli (short blouse).
  • lehmann — Lilli [lil-ee] /ˈlɪl i/ (Show IPA), 1848–1929, German operatic soprano.
  • lethean — Classical Mythology. a river in Hades whose water caused forgetfulness of the past in those who drank of it.
  • machine — an apparatus consisting of interrelated parts with separate functions, used in the performance of some kind of work: a sewing machine.
  • manchet — a kind of white bread made from the finest flour.
  • manetho — flourished c250 b.c, Egyptian high priest of Heliopolis: author of a history of Egypt.
  • manhire — Bill. born 1946, New Zealand poet and writer. His poetry collections include How to Take Off Your Clothes at the Picnic (1977), Zoetropes (1984), Sunshine (1996), and Lifted (2005)
  • manhole — a hole, usually with a cover, through which a person may enter a sewer, drain, steam boiler, etc., especially one located in a city street.
  • marchen — a German fairy tale or fictional story
  • maunche — a conventional representation of a sleeve with a flaring end, used as a charge.
  • mehuman — one of the seven eunuchs who served in the court of King Ahasuerus. Esther 1:10.
  • menasha — a city in E Wisconsin.
  • menorah — a candelabrum having seven branches (as used in the Biblical tabernacle or the Temple in Jerusalem), or any number of branches (as used in modern synagogues).
  • methane — a colorless, odorless, flammable gas, CH 4 , the main constituent of marsh gas and the firedamp of coal mines, obtained commercially from natural gas: the first member of the methane, or alkane, series of hydrocarbons.
  • mohegan — a member of a group of Pequot Indians that broke with the Pequot and then fought against them in the Pequot War.
  • narthex — an enclosed passage between the main entrance and the nave of a church.
  • natchez — a port in SW Mississippi, on the Mississippi River.
  • nechako — a river in central British Columbia, Canada, flowing NE and E to the Fraser river. About 150 miles (240 km) long.
  • needham — a town in E Massachusetts, near Boston.
  • nethack — (games)   /net'hak/ (Unix) A dungeon game similar to rogue but more elaborate, distributed in C source over Usenet and very popular at Unix sites and on PC-class machines (nethack is probably the most widely distributed of the freeware dungeon games). The earliest versions, written by Jay Fenlason and later considerably enhanced by Andries Brouwer, were simply called "hack". The name changed when maintenance was taken over by a group of hackers originally organised by Mike Stephenson. Version: NetHack 3.2 (Apr 1996?). E-mail: <[email protected]>.
  • nethead — (slang) An obsessive Internet user.
  • nuraghe — any of the large, tower-shaped, prehistoric stone structures found in Sardinia and dating from the second millennium b.c. to the Roman conquest.
  • nymphae — Anatomy. one of the inner labia of the vulva.
  • on heat — (of some female mammals) sexually receptive
  • orphean — Greek Legend. a poet and musician, a son of Calliope, who followed his dead wife, Eurydice, to the underworld. By charming Hades, he obtained permission to lead her away, provided he did not look back at her until they returned to earth. But at the last moment he looked, and she was lost to him forever.
  • panache — a grand or flamboyant manner; verve; style; flair: The actor who would play Cyrano must have panache.
  • panhead — a rivet or screw head having the form of a truncated cone.
  • panoche — Also, penuche. a coarse grade of sugar made in Mexico.
  • panther — the cougar or puma, Felis concolor.
  • patchenKenneth, 1911–72, U.S. poet and novelist.
  • phaenna — one of the Graces worshiped at Sparta.
  • phaeton — any of various light, four-wheeled carriages, with or without a top, having one or two seats facing forward, used in the 19th century.
  • phenate — a phenic acid salt
  • phineas — a male given name: from a Hebrew word meaning “serpent's mouth or oracle.”.
  • phonate — to articulate speech sounds, esp to cause the vocal cords to vibrate in the execution of a voiced speech sound
  • phytane — a hydrocarbon found in some fossilized plant remains
  • pinhead — the head of a pin.
  • planche — a flat piece of metal, stone, or baked clay, used as a tray in an enameling oven.
  • quechan — Yuma (defs 1, 2).
  • rancher — a person who owns or works on a ranch.
  • rhdnase — dornase alfa.
  • rhetian — of or relating to Rhaetia.
  • sachsen — German name of Saxony.
  • sanchezSonia (Wilsonia Driver) born 1934, U.S. poet, activist, and teacher.
  • saphena — saphenous vein.
  • senhora — a Portuguese term of address equivalent to Mrs., used alone or capitalized and prefixed to the name of a married or older woman. Abbreviation: Sra.
  • shantey — chantey.
  • sharpen — knife: make sharper
  • shawnee — a member of an Algonquian-speaking tribe formerly in the east-central U.S., now in Oklahoma.
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