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6-letter words containing h, a

  • dargah — the tomb of a Muslim saint; a Muslim shrine
  • dashed — made up of dashes: a dashed line down the middle of the road.
  • dasher — someone or something that dashes
  • dashes — Plural form of dash.
  • datcha — a Russian country house or villa.
  • dayhop — a day's journey; a distance that can be traveled in one day.
  • dealth — (obsolete) A share dealt out.
  • dearth — If there is a dearth of something, there is not enough of it.
  • deaths — Plural form of death.
  • deathy — (obsolete) Relating to death.
  • dedham — a town in E Massachusetts, near Boston.
  • dehair — any of the numerous fine, usually cylindrical, keratinous filaments growing from the skin of humans and animals; a pilus.
  • deheat — (nonstandard,rare) To cool.
  • denhamSir John, 1615–69, English poet and architect.
  • detach — If you detach one thing from another that it is fixed to, you remove it. If one thing detaches from another, it becomes separated from it.
  • dhaman — a large, harmless, colubrid snake, Ptyas mucosus, of southern Asia, the skin of which is used in making shoes, purses, and other items.
  • dhamma — essential quality or character, as of the cosmos or one's own nature.
  • dhania — Coriander.
  • dharma — social custom regarded as a religious and moral duty
  • dharna — (in India) a method of obtaining justice, as the payment of a debt, by sitting, fasting, at the door of the person from whom reparation is sought
  • dharuk — an Australian aboriginal language, now extinct, spoken in the area of the first European settlement at Port Jackson.
  • dhokla — A food, visually similar to cake and compositionally similar to khaman, made from a batter of gram flour (from chickpeas), cooked by steaming and typically eaten in India.
  • dholak — A dhol, especially a relatively small one.
  • 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.
  • dhyana — (Hinduism, Buddhism) A type of profound meditation.
  • diarch — (of a vascular bundle) having two strands of xylem
  • dincha — (eye dialect, informal) Didn't you.
  • dirham — a money of account of Iraq, the 20th part of a dinar, equal to 50 fils.
  • doncha — (informal) don't you.
  • doodah — A thing; especially an unspecified gadget, device, or part.
  • doohan — Michael K (Mick). born 1965, Australian racing motorcyclist; 500 cc world champion 1994–98
  • dothan — a city in SE Alabama.
  • dourah — a type of grain sorghum with slender stalks, cultivated in Asia and Africa and introduced into the U.S.
  • drachm — drachma.
  • 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.
  • dunhamKatherine, 1910?–2006, U.S. dancer and choreographer.
  • durham — a county in NE England. 940 sq. mi. (2435 sq. km).
  • e-cash — money that is exchanged electronically over computer or telecommunications networks.
  • eacher — every one of two or more considered individually or one by one: each stone in a building; a hallway with a door at each end.
  • eadish — the growth (of grass) that remains or appears after cutting
  • eartha — a female given name.
  • earths — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of earth.
  • earthy — of the nature of or consisting of earth or soil.
  • eatche — a wood-working tool that has a blade that bends towards the handle and is used for paring or shaving
  • eateth — Archaic third-person singular form of eat.
  • eather — Obsolete spelling of either.
  • echard — the water in soil that is not available for absorption by plants.
  • elijah — a Hebrew prophet of the 9th century bc, who was persecuted for denouncing Ahab and Jezebel. (I Kings 17–21: 21; II Kings 1–2:18)
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