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6-letter words containing h, e, p

  • heaped — a group of things placed, thrown, or lying one on another; pile: a heap of stones.
  • heaper — a group of things placed, thrown, or lying one on another; pile: a heap of stones.
  • helped — to give or provide what is necessary to accomplish a task or satisfy a need; contribute strength or means to; render assistance to; cooperate effectively with; aid; assist: He planned to help me with my work. Let me help you with those packages.
  • helper — a person or thing that helps or gives assistance, support, etc.
  • helply — (UK dialectal) Aiding; assisting; ready to help; helpful.
  • hempelCarl Gustav, 1905–1997, U.S. philosopher, born in Germany.
  • hempen — of, like, or pertaining to hemp.
  • hepat- — hepato-
  • hepcat — a performer or admirer of jazz, especially swing.
  • hepnet — An association concerned with networking requirements for high energy physicists.
  • hepped — hipped2 .
  • heppen — (obsolete) neat; fit; comfortable.
  • hepper — hip4 .
  • hepta- — seven
  • heptad — the number seven.
  • herpes — any of several diseases caused by herpesvirus, characterized by eruption of blisters on the skin or mucous membranes. Compare chickenpox, genital herpes, oral herpes, shingles.
  • hesper — Hesperus.
  • het up — indignant; irate; upset: She was really het up about the new city tax.
  • hipped — familiar with or informed about the latest ideas, styles, developments, etc.: My parents aren't exactly hip, you know.
  • hipper — Also, hipness. the condition or state of being hip.
  • hippie — a person, especially of the late 1960s, who rejected established institutions and values and sought spontaneity, direct personal relations expressing love, and expanded consciousness, often expressed externally in the wearing of casual, folksy clothing and of beads, headbands, used garments, etc.
  • hirple — (intransitive, Scotland, northern UK) to walk with a limp, to drag a limb, to walk lamely; to move with a gait somewhere between walking and crawling.
  • hogpen — pigpen (def 1).
  • holpen — a past participle of help.
  • hooped — Simple past tense and past participle of hoop.
  • hooper — a person who makes or puts hoops on barrels, tubs, etc.; a cooper.
  • hoopoe — any Old World bird of the family Upupidae, especially Upupa epops, of Europe, having an erectile, fanlike crest.
  • hopers — the feeling that what is wanted can be had or that events will turn out for the best: to give up hope.
  • hopeth — Archaic third-person singular form of hope.
  • hoples — a son of Ion.
  • hopped — to make a short, bouncing leap; move by leaping with all feet off the ground.
  • hopperEdward, 1882–1967, U.S. painter and etcher.
  • hopple — to hobble; tether.
  • hp vee — Hewlett-Packard Visual Engineering Environment
  • hp-mpe — Hewlett Packard Multi Processing Executive
  • hpcode — Stack-based intermediate language used by HP in many of its compilers for RISC and stack-based architectures. Supports Fortran, Ada, Pascal, COBOL and C++. Descended from Stanford's U-code.
  • humped — having a hump.
  • humpen — a round drinking glass formerly made in Germany
  • humper — a rounded protuberance, especially a fleshy protuberance on the back, as that due to abnormal curvature of the spine in humans, or that normally present in certain animals, as the camel or bison.
  • humpie — a pink salmon inhabiting North Pacific waters: so-called because of the hump that appears behind the head of the male when it is ready for spawning.
  • hurple — (Scotland) An impediment similar to a limp.
  • hypate — (on the ancient Greek lyre) the highest placed string, producing the lowest tone
  • hyper- — Hyper- is used to form adjectives that describe someone as having a lot or too much of a particular quality.
  • hyphae — (in a fungus) one of the threadlike elements of the mycelium.
  • hyphen — a short line (-) used to connect the parts of a compound word or the parts of a word divided for any purpose.
  • hypped — (dated) Affected with hypochondria.
  • i hope — You use 'I hope' in expressions such as 'I hope you don't mind' and 'I hope I'm not disturbing you', when you are being polite and want to make sure that you have not offended someone or disturbed them.
  • imphee — an African sorghum plant that yields a sweet juice
  • iphone — Alternative case form of iPhone.
  • joseph — 1741–90, emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 1765–90 (son of Francis I; brother of Leopold II and Marie Antoinette).
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