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11-letter words containing h, a, r

  • handicapper — Horse Racing. a racetrack official or employee who assigns the weight a horse must carry in a race. a person employed, as by a newspaper, to make predictions on the outcomes of horse races.
  • handicrafts — Plural form of handicraft.
  • handrailing — Handrail.
  • handscrolls — Plural form of handscroll.
  • handsprings — Plural form of handspring.
  • handwringer — a person who wrings the hands often as a display of worry or upset
  • handwriting — writing done with a pen or pencil in the hand; script.
  • handwritten — to write (something) by hand.
  • handwrought — formed or shaped by hand, as metal objects.
  • handyperson — a person who is practiced at doing maintenance work.
  • hang around — to fasten or attach (a thing) so that it is supported only from above or at a point near its own top; suspend.
  • hang glider — a kitelike glider consisting of a V -shaped wing underneath which the pilot is strapped: kept aloft by updrafts and guided by the pilot's shifting body weight.
  • hang-glider — a kitelike glider consisting of a V -shaped wing underneath which the pilot is strapped: kept aloft by updrafts and guided by the pilot's shifting body weight.
  • haphazardly — in a haphazard manner; at random.
  • haphazardry — haphazard character, state, or order; fortuity.
  • haplography — the accidental omission of a letter or letter group that should be repeated in writing, as in Missippi for Mississippi.
  • haplogroups — Plural form of haplogroup.
  • haptotropic — relating to haptotropism
  • harassingly — in a harassing manner
  • harassments — Plural form of harassment.
  • harbingered — Simple past tense and past participle of harbinger.
  • harbor seal — a small, spotted seal, Phoca vitulina, of the Atlantic coasts of North America and Europe and the Pacific coast of northern North America.
  • harbourless — Without a harbour.
  • harbourside — An area (especially a residential area) near a harbour (often in the form of converted warehouses etc).
  • hard by sth — If one thing is hard by another, it is very close to it.
  • hard cheese — an unpleasant, difficult, or adverse situation: It's hard cheese for the unskilled worker these days.
  • hard dinkum — hard work; a difficult task.
  • hard ground — an etching ground applied to the surface of a plate held over a small flame and spread by a dabber or brayer. Compare soft ground (def 1).
  • hard hitter — a bowler hat
  • hard labour — Hard labour is hard physical work which people have to do as punishment for a crime.
  • hard launch — the general or official launch, esp of a website, after which all features, products, and services are understood to be available
  • hard liquor — spirits, alcoholic drink
  • hard palate — Anatomy. the roof of the mouth, consisting of an anterior bony portion (hard palate) and a posterior muscular portion (soft palate) that separate the oral cavity from the nasal cavity.
  • hard porn's — hard-core pornography.
  • hard rubber — rubber vulcanized with a large amount of sulfur, usually 25–35 percent, to render it stiff and comparatively inflexible.
  • hard sector — (storage)   An archaic floppy disk format employing multiple synchronisation holes in the media to define the sectors.
  • hard-bitten — tough; stubborn.
  • hard-bodied — a person who is muscular and physically fit.
  • hard-boiled — Cookery. (of an egg) boiled in the shell long enough for the yolk and white to solidify.
  • hard-coated — having a coarsely textured coat, as a dog.
  • hard-earned — A hard-earned victory or hard-earned cash is a victory or money that someone deserves because they have worked hard for it.
  • hard-fisted — stingy; miserly; closefisted.
  • hard-fought — firmly or passionately contested or struggled for
  • hard-handed — oppressive or tyrannical; stern or cruel.
  • hard-headed — not easily moved or deceived; practical; shrewd.
  • hard-ticket — a ticket entitling one to a reserved seat.
  • hardecanute — 1019?–42, king of Denmark 1035–42, king of England 1040–42 (son of Canute).
  • hardhearted — unfeeling; unmerciful; pitiless.
  • hardicanute — 1019?–42, king of Denmark 1035–42, king of England 1040–42 (son of Canute).
  • hardly ever — rarely
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