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

  • hatchment — a square tablet, set diagonally, bearing the coat of arms of a deceased person.
  • have done — Usually, haves. an individual or group that has wealth, social position, or other material benefits (contrasted with have-not).
  • have-nots — people who are very poor
  • haversian — designating or of the canals through which blood vessels and connective tissue pass in bone
  • haversine — one half the versed sine of a given angle or arc.
  • hawthorneNathaniel, 1804–64, U.S. novelist and short-story writer.
  • hazelnuts — Plural form of hazelnut.
  • head tone — (in singing) a vocal tone so produced as to bring the cavities of the nose and head into sympathetic vibration.
  • head wind — wind blowing head-on
  • headbands — Plural form of headband.
  • headcanon — (fandom slang) Elements and interpretations of a fictional universe accepted by an individual fan, but not found within or supported by the official canon.
  • headcount — The act of counting how many people are present in a group.
  • headiness — intoxicating: a heady wine.
  • headlands — Plural form of headland.
  • headlined — Simple past tense and past participle of headline.
  • headliner — a performer whose name appears most prominently in a program or advertisement or on a marquee; star.
  • headlines — Plural form of headline.
  • headnotes — Plural form of headnote.
  • headphone — Audio. a headset designed for use with a stereo system.
  • headstand — an act or instance of supporting the body in a vertical position by balancing on the head usually with the aid of the hands.
  • headstone — a stone marker set at the head of a grave; gravestone.
  • headwinds — Plural form of headwind.
  • healingly — in a healing manner, intended to heal
  • hearkened — Literary. to give heed or attention to what is said; listen.
  • hearkener — One who hearkens; a listener.
  • heartburn — an uneasy burning sensation in the stomach, typically extending toward the esophagus, and sometimes associated with the eructation of an acid fluid.
  • heartened — to give courage or confidence to; cheer.
  • 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
  • heat sink — Thermodynamics. any environment or medium that absorbs heat.
  • heat-moonWilliam Least [leest] /list/ (Show IPA), (William Trogden) born 1939, U.S. writer.
  • heath hen — an American gallinaceous bird, Tympanuchus cupido cupido, closely related to the prairie chicken: extinct.
  • heathenry — The state of being heathen.
  • heathland — An extensive area of heath.
  • heaviness — of great weight; hard to lift or carry: a heavy load.
  • heavy ion — the nucleus of a heavy element.
  • 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).
  • hedyphane — a white or yellow mineral with elongated crystals similar to mimetite, chiefly found in Sweden
  • 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).
  • heliconia — any of a genus of tropical flowering plants with long flowering panicles
  • heliozoan — a protozoan of the order Heliozoa, having a spherical body and radiating pseudopods.
  • hellspawn — (fantasy) A creature or creatures from Hell.
  • helvetian — of or relating to Helvetia or the Helvetii.
  • hematinic — a medicine, as a compound of iron, that tends to increase the amount of hematin or hemoglobin in the blood.
  • hemingway — Ernest (Miller) 1899–1961, U.S. novelist, short-story writer, and journalist: Nobel Prize 1954.
  • hemogenia — pseudohemophilia.
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