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11-letter words containing h, a, r

  • green flash — a green coloration of the upper portion of the sun, caused by atmospheric refraction and occasionally seen as the sun rises above or sinks below the horizon.
  • greenhearts — Plural form of greenheart.
  • greenshanks — Plural form of greenshank.
  • grey-haired — having grey hair
  • grey-headed — having gray hair.
  • groatsworth — the amount that is, or may be, bought or sold for a groat
  • groundshare — to share the facilities and running costs of a single stadium with another team
  • growth area — a geographic or economic area in which there is noticeable growth
  • growth rate — increase per unit
  • guardhouses — Plural form of guardhouse.
  • gullywasher — a usually short, heavy rainstorm.
  • guru granth — the sacred scripture of the Sikhs, believed by them to be the embodiment of the gurus
  • gymnasiarch — (in ancient Greece) a magistrate who superintended the gymnasia and public games in certain cities.
  • gymnorhinal — (of a bird) having the nostrils exposed, not covered by feathers.
  • h-r diagram — Hertzsprung-Russell diagram.
  • haberdasher — a retail dealer in men's furnishings, as shirts, ties, gloves, socks, and hats.
  • habilitator — to clothe or dress.
  • hack around — to cut, notch, slice, chop, or sever (something) with or as with heavy, irregular blows (often followed by up or down): to hack meat; to hack down trees.
  • hack hammer — an adzlike tool for dressing stone.
  • hack writer — a writer of undistinguished literary work produced to order
  • hackberries — Plural form of hackberry.
  • hackerspace — A place where hackers meet to work on programming and hardware projects together, and to share their knowledge.
  • hacking run — (jargon)   (Analogy with "bombing run" or "speed run") A hack session extended long outside normal working times, especially one longer than 12 hours. May cause you to "change phase the hard way".
  • hadrian iiiSaint, Italian ecclesiastic: pope a.d. 884–885.
  • hadrosaurid — (zoology) Any of the family Hadrosauridae of duck-billed dinosaurs; a hadrosaur.
  • haemachrome — Hematin.
  • haematocrit — Alternative spelling of hematocrit.
  • haemochrome — a blood pigment, such as haemoglobin, that carries oxygen
  • haemorrhage — (pathology) A heavy release of blood within or from a body.
  • haemorrhoid — (UK) alternative spelling of hemorrhoid.
  • haemothorax — Alternative form of hemothorax.
  • haggardness — having a gaunt, wasted, or exhausted appearance, as from prolonged suffering, exertion, or anxiety; worn: the haggard faces of the tired troops.
  • hagiographa — the third of the three Jewish divisions of the Old Testament, variously arranged, but usually comprising the Psalms, Proverbs, Job, Song of Solomon, Ruth, Lamentations, Ecclesiastes, Esther, Daniel, Ezra, Nehemiah, and Chronicles.
  • hagiography — the writing and critical study of the lives of the saints; hagiology.
  • hair colour — the colour or shade of someone's hair
  • hair roller — a small Velcro cylinder used for rolling up and curling or styling the hair
  • hair stroke — a fine line in writing or printing.
  • hair-curler — a cylindrical device, usually electronic and heated, used to curl the hair
  • hair-raiser — a story, experience, etc., that is terrifying or thrilling.
  • hairbrained — giddy; reckless.
  • hairbreadth — a very small space or distance: We escaped an accident by a hairsbreadth.
  • hairbrushes — Plural form of hairbrush.
  • haircutting — an act or instance of cutting the hair.
  • hairdresser — a person who arranges or cuts hair.
  • hairsprings — Plural form of hairspring.
  • hairstreaks — Plural form of hairstreak.
  • hairstyling — a person who designs and arranges hair styles.
  • hairstylist — A person who cuts and styles people's hair professionally.
  • hairweaving — the attachment of matching hair to a base of nylon thread interwoven with a person's own hair, as to cover a bald area or to add length: Three of the makeovers involved hairweaving.
  • hairy vetch — a plant, Vicia villosa, of the legume family, native to Eurasia, having hairy stems and violet and white flowers, widely grown as forage and as a cover crop.
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