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6-letter words containing h, a, r

  • ashore — Someone or something that comes ashore comes from the sea onto the shore.
  • ashram — a religious retreat or community where a Hindu holy man lives
  • ashura — a Shiah festival observed on the tenth day of Muharram in the Islamic calendar to commemorate the death of the martyr Imam Hussein bin Ali at the Battle of Karbala in 61 ah (680 ad)
  • asshur — Ashur1
  • athrob — pulsing or throbbing
  • auroch — Alternative spelling of aurochs.
  • author — The author of a piece of writing is the person who wrote it.
  • awhirl — in a whirling, confused state
  • barhop — to visit several bars in succession
  • barish — quite thinly covered or bare
  • bartheRichmond, 1901–1989, U.S. sculptor.
  • baruch — a disciple of Jeremiah (Jeremiah 32–36)
  • basher — to strike with a crushing or smashing blow.
  • bashir — Dame Marie (Roslyn). born 1930, Australian health administrator and campaigner: governor of New South Wales (2001–14)
  • bather — A bather is a person who is swimming in the sea, or in a river or lake.
  • bechar — a city in NW Algeria: an oasis. Pop: 149 000 (2005 est)
  • bertha — a wide deep capelike collar, often of lace, usually to cover up a low neckline
  • bharal — a wild Himalayan sheep, Pseudois nayaur, with a bluish-grey coat and round backward-curving horns
  • bharat — India (the republic)
  • bihari — a member of an Indian people living chiefly in Bihar but also in other parts of NW India and Bangladesh
  • blargh — /blarg/ [MIT] The opposite of ping. An exclamation indicating that one has absorbed or is emitting a quantum of unhappiness. Less common than ping.
  • bpharm — Bachelor of Pharmacy
  • brahma — a Hindu god: in later Hindu tradition, the Creator who, with Vishnu, the Preserver, and Shiva, the Destroyer, constitutes the triad known as the Trimurti
  • brahmi — a script of India that was probably adapted from the Aramaic alphabet about the 7th century b.c., and from which most of the later Indian scripts developed.
  • brahms — Johannes (joˈhanəs). 1833–97, German composer, whose music, though classical in form, exhibits a strong lyrical romanticism. His works include four symphonies, four concertos, chamber music, and A German Requiem (1868)
  • brahui — a language spoken in Pakistan, forming an isolated branch of the Dravidian family
  • bramahJoseph, 1748–1814, English engineer and inventor.
  • branch — The branches of a tree are the parts that grow out from its trunk and have leaves, flowers, or fruit growing on them.
  • brashy — loosely fragmented; rubbishy
  • breach — If you breach an agreement, a law, or a promise, you break it.
  • breath — Your breath is the air that you let out through your mouth when you breathe. If someone has bad breath, their breath smells unpleasant.
  • broach — When you broach a subject, especially a sensitive one, you mention it in order to start a discussion on it.
  • burkha — all-enveloping garment worn by Muslim women
  • cacher — One who caches.
  • cahier — a notebook
  • carhop — a waiter or waitress at a drive-in restaurant
  • casher — One who cashes (a cheque, etc.).
  • cathar — a member of a Christian sect in Provence in the 12th and 13th centuries who believed the material world was evil and only the spiritual was good
  • cather — Willa (Sibert). 1873–1947, US novelist, whose works include O Pioneers! (1913) and My Ántonia (1918)
  • chadar — the traditional garment of Muslim and Hindu women, consisting of a long, usually black or drab-colored cloth or veil that envelops the body from head to foot and covers all or part of the face.
  • chador — a large, square cloth traditionally worn as a shawl or cloak by Muslim and Hindu women
  • chadri — a shroud which covers the body from head to foot, usually worn by females in Islamic countries
  • chafer — any of various scarabaeid beetles, such as the cockchafer and rose chafer
  • chahar — a former province of Inner Mongolia in NE China: divided 1952 among adjacent provinces.
  • chairs — Plural form of chair.
  • chakra — (in yoga) any of the seven major energy centres in the body
  • charas — hashish
  • charco — a water hole, pool, or puddle.
  • chards — Plural form of chard.
  • chared — Simple past tense and past participle of chare.
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