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10-letter words containing h, e, r, i, n

  • hardliners — Plural form of hardliner.
  • harlequins — Plural form of harlequin.
  • harmonised — Simple past tense and past participle of harmonise.
  • harmoniser — (British spelling) alternative spelling of harmonizer.
  • harmonises — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of harmonise.
  • harmonized — Add notes to (a melody) to produce harmony.
  • harmonizer — to bring into harmony, accord, or agreement: to harmonize one's views with the new situation.
  • harmonizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of harmonize.
  • harnessing — the combination of straps, bands, and other parts forming the working gear of a draft animal. Compare yoke1 (def 1).
  • harvesting — Also, harvesting. the gathering of crops.
  • hateration — (African American Vernacular English, slang) Hatred, hostility, animus.
  • headliners — Plural form of headliner.
  • headspring — the fountainhead or source of a stream.
  • hearkening — Literary. to give heed or attention to what is said; listen.
  • heartening — to give courage or confidence to; cheer.
  • heartiness — warm-hearted; affectionate; cordial; jovial: a hearty welcome.
  • heavy rain — torrential rainfall
  • heisenberg — Werner Karl [ver-nuh r kahrl] /ˈvɛr nər kɑrl/ (Show IPA), 1901–76, German physicist: Nobel Prize 1932.
  • helleborin — a colorless, crystalline, water-insoluble, poisonous solid, C 28 H 36 O 6 , obtained from the rhizome and root of certain hellebores, and used in medicine chiefly as a purgative.
  • hemicrania — pain in one side of the head.
  • hemihedron — a substance of hemihedral type
  • hemikaryon — a haploid nucleus.
  • hemipteran — hemipterous.
  • hemipteron — Alternative form of hemipteran.
  • henry viii — ("Defender of the Faith") 1491–1547, king of England 1509–47 (son of Henry VII).
  • heparinize — Add heparin to (blood or a container about to be filled with blood) to prevent it from coagulating.
  • herakleion — a seaport in N Crete.
  • herniation — to protrude abnormally from an enclosed cavity or from the body so as to constitute a hernia.
  • herniotomy — correction of a hernia by a cutting procedure.
  • heroicness — Also, heroical. of, relating to, or characteristic of a hero or heroine.
  • heronsbill — any of a genus (Erodium) of plants of the geranium family, with fine leaves and yellow, white, or reddish flowers
  • herpangina — an infectious disease, especially of children, characterized by a sudden occurrence of fever, loss of appetite, and throat ulcerations, caused by a Coxsackie virus.
  • hesperidin — a crystallizable, bioflavinoid glycoside, C 28 H 34 O 15 , occurring in most citrus fruits, especially in the spongy envelope of oranges and lemons.
  • hesperinos — vesper (def 3).
  • hexandrian — (of a plant) having six stamens
  • hibernacle — a protective case or covering, especially for winter, as of an animal or a plant bud.
  • hibernated — Simple past tense and past participle of hibernate.
  • hibernates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of hibernate.
  • hibernator — Something that hibernates.
  • hieromancy — divination through studying objects offered in sacrifice
  • hieronymic — of or relating to St. Jerome.
  • hieronymus — Eusebius [yoo-see-bee-uh s] /yuˈsi bi əs/ (Show IPA), Jerome, Saint.
  • hierophant — (in ancient Greece) an official expounder of rites of worship and sacrifice.
  • hierophany — A physical manifestation of the holy or sacred, serving as a spiritual eidolon for emulation or worship.
  • highbinder — a swindler; confidence man; cheat.
  • highlander — a Gael inhabiting the Highlands of Scotland.
  • hildebrandSaint (Hildebrand) c1020–85, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1073–85.
  • hindenburgPaul von [pawl von;; German poul fuh n] /pɔl vɒn;; German paʊl fən/ (Show IPA), (Paul von Beneckendorff und von Hindenburg) 1847–1934, German field marshal; 2nd president of Germany 1925–34.
  • hinderance — Archaic spelling of hindrance.
  • hinderland — a type of linen cloth from Europe
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