6-letter words containing h, a, u
- cutcha — crude; makeshift
- dachau — a town in S Germany, in Bavaria: site of a Nazi concentration camp. Pop: 39 474 (2003 est)
- dharuk — an Australian aboriginal language, now extinct, spoken in the area of the first European settlement at Port Jackson.
- dhulia — a city in Maharashtra state, W central India.
- dhurna — (in India) the practice of exacting justice or compliance with a just demand by sitting and fasting at the doorstep of an offender until death or until the demand is granted.
- dourah — a type of grain sorghum with slender stalks, cultivated in Asia and Africa and introduced into the U.S.
- dukkah — An Egyptian dry mixture of chopped nuts, seeds and Middle Eastern spices, usually eaten by dipping bread into olive oil and then into the mixture.
- dukkha — the first of the Four Noble Truths, that all human experience is transient and that suffering results from excessive desire and attachment.
- dunham — Katherine, 1910?–2006, U.S. dancer and choreographer.
- durham — a county in NE England. 940 sq. mi. (2435 sq. km).
- fulham — a die loaded at one corner either to favor a throw of 4, 5, or 6 (high fulham) or to favor a throw of 1, 2, or 3 (low fulham)
- fuqaha — plural of faqih.
- galuth — the forced exile of Jews, especially from countries where they were most persecuted.
- gauche — lacking social grace, sensitivity, or acuteness; awkward; crude; tactless: Their exquisite manners always make me feel gauche.
- gaucho — a native cowboy of the South American pampas, usually of mixed Spanish and Indian ancestry.
- ghauts — Plural form of ghaut.
- guache — Alternative spelling of gouache.
- gubbah — a white person.
- gullah — a member of a population of black Americans inhabiting the Sea Islands and the coastal regions of South Carolina, Georgia, and northeastern Florida.
- gunyah — an aboriginal hut or shelter.
- gurkha — a member of a Rajput people, Hindu in religion, who achieved dominion over Nepal in the 18th century.
- gurrah — a type of coarse Indian muslin
- habiru — a nomadic people mentioned in Assyro-Babylonian literature: possibly the early Hebrews.
- hagbut — harquebus.
- haiduk — one of a class of mercenary soldiers in 16th-century Hungary.
- haikou — a city on N Hainan island, in SE China.
- haikus — Plural form of haiku.
- hallux — the first or innermost digit of the foot of humans and other primates or of the hind foot of other mammals; great toe; big toe.
- halutz — a person who immigrates to Israel to establish or join a settlement for accomplishing tasks, as clearing the land or planting trees, that are necessary to future development of the country.
- ham up — an actor or performer who overacts.
- hamous — Alternative form of hamose.
- hamsun — Knut [knoot] /knut/ (Show IPA), 1859–1952, Norwegian novelist: Nobel Prize 1920.
- hamuli — Plural form of hamulus.
- han yu — (Han Wen-kung; Han Wengong) a.d. 768–824, Chinese writer, poet, and philosopher.
- hangul — the Korean alphabetic writing system, introduced in the 15th century, containing 14 consonants and 11 vowels.
- hangup — Alternative spelling of hang-up.
- hankou — a former city in E Hubei province, in E China: now part of Wuhan.
- hatasu — Hatshepsut.
- hatful — The amount that will fit into a hat.
- haught — (obsolete) Haughty.
- hauhau — a 19th-century Māori religious sect
- hauled — to pull or draw with force; move by drawing; drag: They hauled the boat up onto the beach.
- hauler — a person who hauls.
- haulmy — having haulms
- haunch — the hip.
- haunts — to visit habitually or appear to frequently as a spirit or ghost: to haunt a house; to haunt a person.
- hausen — beluga (def 1).
- hausse — (military, historical) A kind of graduated breech sight for a small arm or cannon.
- hauter — high-class or high-toned; fancy: an haute restaurant that attracts a monied crowd.
- hauyne — a blue feldspathoid mineral found in igneous rock