8-letter words containing h, e, r, i
- hysteric — Usually, hysterics. a fit of uncontrollable laughter or weeping; hysteria.
- ihimaera — Witi (ˈwɪtɪ), full name Witi Tame Ihimaera-Smiler. born 1944, New Zealand Māori novelist and short-story writer; his novels include The Whale Rider (1987) and The Uncle's Story (2002)
- in there — in or into that place
- inarched — Simple past tense and past participle of inarch.
- indrench — to submerge, immerse, or drown (someone in something)
- ingather — to gather or bring in, as a harvest.
- inhalers — Plural form of inhaler.
- inhearse — (transitive) To place into, or as if into, a hearse or coffin.
- inherent — existing in someone or something as a permanent and inseparable element, quality, or attribute; inhering: an inherent distrust of strangers.
- inhering — to exist permanently and inseparably in, as a quality, attribute, or element; belong intrinsically; be inherent: the advantages that inhere in a democratic system.
- inherits — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of inherit.
- inholder — An indweller, or anything indwelling; inhabitant; occupant.
- inrushes — Plural form of inrush.
- inshrine — enshrine.
- insphere — ensphere.
- inthrone — enthrone.
- intrench — Alternative form of entrench.
- irishize — to make Irish, as in character or custom; give an Irish character to.
- iserlohn — a city in North Rhine-Westphalia,W Germany.
- isochore — Physics.. Also, isochor. Also called isometric, isometric line. for a given substance, a curve graphing temperature against pressure, when the volume of the substance is held constant.
- isothere — a line on a weather map or chart connecting points that have the same mean summer temperature.
- isotherm — Meteorology. a line on a weather map or chart connecting points having equal temperature.
- jahrzeit — the anniversary of the death of a parent, sibling, child, or spouse, observed by lighting a memorial lamp or candle the night before and reciting the Kaddish at the evening service of the day before and at the morning and afternoon services of the day itself.
- jehangir — 1569–1627, 4th Mogul emperor in India 1605–27 (son of Akbar).
- jeremiah — a Major Prophet of the 6th and 7th centuries b.c.
- kerchief — a woman's square scarf worn as a covering for the head or sometimes the shoulders.
- kerching — (onomatopoeia, informal, humorous) Said to indicate that someone is obtaining money, especially a comparatively large amount.
- kirchner — Ernst Ludwig, 1880–1938, German expressionist artist.
- lighters — Plural form of lighter.
- linisher — a machine that polishes and makes the surface of a material smooth using a moving belt coated in an abrasive material
- litharge — a yellowish or reddish, odorless, heavy, earthy, water-insoluble, poisonous solid, PbO, used chiefly in the manufacture of storage batteries, pottery, lead glass, paints, enamels, and inks.
- litherly — crafty, cunning, or mischievous
- liverish — resembling liver, especially in color.
- lutherie — The craft of making stringed musical instruments.
- luthiers — Plural form of luthier.
- machiner — One who operates a machine.
- maghrebi — a native or inhabitant of the Maghreb.
- mairehau — a small aromatic shrub Phebalium nudum, of New Zealand's North Island
- marishes — a marsh.
- melchior — one of the three Magi.
- merchild — a mythical creature with the upper body of a child and the lower body of a fish
- meredith — George, 1828–1909, English novelist and poet.
- michener — (Daniel) Roland, 1900–91, Canadian public official and diplomat: governor general 1967–74.
- mightier — having, characterized by, or showing superior power or strength: mighty rulers.
- misheard — to hear incorrectly or imperfectly: to mishear a remark.
- mishears — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of mishear.
- misthrew — Simple past form of misthrow.
- mithered — Simple past tense and past participle of mither.
- mitscher — Marc Andrew, 1887–1947, U.S. naval officer and aviator.
- morphine — a white, bitter, crystalline alkaloid, C 1 7 H 1 9 NO 3 ⋅H 2 O, the most important narcotic and addictive principle of opium, obtained by extraction and crystallization and used chiefly in medicine as a pain reliever and sedative.