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8-letter words containing g, a, t, h

  • faithing — the practice of a faith
  • fanlight — a window over a door or another window, especially one having the form of a semicircle or of half an ellipse.
  • farsight — The faculty of looking far ahead; farsightedness; prescience.
  • farthing — a former bronze coin of Great Britain, equal to one-fourth of a British penny: withdrawn in 1961.
  • fraughts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of fraught.
  • fughetta — a short fugue
  • gahnites — Plural form of gahnite.
  • gaslight — light produced by the combustion of illuminating gas.
  • gasthaus — a German inn or tavern.
  • gastight — not penetrable by a gas.
  • gathered — Simple past tense and past participle of gather.
  • gatherer — to bring together into one group, collection, or place: to gather firewood; to gather the troops.
  • ghastful — frightful.
  • gilthead — any of several marine fishes having gold markings, as a sparid, Sparus auratus, of the Mediterranean Sea.
  • gnathion — Craniometry. the lowest point on the anterior margin of the lower jaw in the midsaggital plane.
  • gnathite — any of the mouth appendages of an insect or other arthropod.
  • goatfish — any tropical and subtropical marine fish of the family Mullidae, having a pair of long barbels below the mouth.
  • goatherd — a person who tends goats.
  • goethalsGeorge Washington, 1858–1928, U.S. major general and engineer: chief engineer of the Panama Canal 1907–14; governor of the Canal Zone 1914–16.
  • golgotha — a hill near Jerusalem where Jesus was crucified; Calvary.
  • goliaths — Plural form of goliath.
  • gomashta — (India,now,historical) A native Indian clerk or steward.
  • graithly — in a graith manner
  • grantham — a town in E England, in Lincolnshire: birthplace of Sir Isaac Newton and Margaret Thatcher. Pop: 34 592 (2001)
  • graphite — a very common mineral, soft native carbon, occurring in black to dark-gray foliated masses, with metallic luster and greasy feel: used for pencil leads, as a lubricant, and for making crucibles and other refractories; plumbago; black lead.
  • gray hat — a hacker who violates the security of a system without true malicious intent but often without the prior knowledge or consent of the owner or developer, and who later reports system vulnerabilities to the authorities, sometimes for personal profit.
  • groaneth — Archaic third-person singular form of groan.
  • habiting — Present participle of habit.
  • hagueton — acton.
  • hame tug — a loop or short leather strap attaching a trace to a hame.
  • hang it! — an exclamation of anger or exasperation
  • hang out — to fasten or attach (a thing) so that it is supported only from above or at a point near its own top; suspend.
  • hang tag — A hang tag is a small cardboard or plastic label that hangs from an item of clothing and gives information such as size, color, fabric, and price.
  • hang ten — to fasten or attach (a thing) so that it is supported only from above or at a point near its own top; suspend.
  • hangouts — Plural form of hangout.
  • hangtags — Plural form of hangtag.
  • hastingsThomas, 1860–1929, U.S. architect.
  • hatching — a shading line in drawing or engraving.
  • hatguard — a string to keep a hat from blowing off
  • haunting — remaining in the consciousness; not quickly forgotten: haunting music; haunting memories.
  • have got — have, possess
  • headgate — a gate that is used to control the flow of water at the upper end of a lock or conduit
  • hearting — Present participle of heart.
  • heat gun — a handheld device that produces a flameless stream of extremely hot air, as for rapid drying or for softening paint for removal.
  • helotage — a member of the lowest class in ancient Laconia, constituting a body of serfs who were bound to the land and were owned by the state. Compare Perioeci, Spartiate.
  • heptagon — a polygon having seven angles and seven sides.
  • heritage — something that is handed down from the past, as a tradition: a national heritage of honor, pride, and courage.
  • hexaglot — a book written in six languages
  • high hat — a snobbish person
  • high tea — a late afternoon or early evening meal similar to a light supper.
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