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5-letter words containing h, e, t

  • heats — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of heat.
  • hechtBen, 1894–1964, U.S. novelist and dramatist.
  • hefts — Plural form of heft.
  • hefty — heavy; weighty: a hefty book.
  • heist — a robbery or holdup: Four men were involved in the armored car heist.
  • helot — a member of the lowest class in ancient Laconia, constituting a body of serfs who were bound to the land and were owned by the state. Compare Perioeci, Spartiate.
  • helpt — Simple past tense and past participle of help.
  • helth — Obsolete form of health.
  • hemet — a city in SW California.
  • hents — to seize.
  • hentyGeorge Alfred, 1832–1902, English journalist and novelist.
  • hentz — ErrorTitleDiv {.
  • herat — a city in NW Afghanistan.
  • herts — a county in SE England. 631 sq. mi. (1635 sq. km).
  • hertz — the standard unit of frequency in the International System of Units (SI), equal to one cycle per second. Abbreviation: Hz.
  • hests — Plural form of hest.
  • heter — a heterosexual person.
  • hetro — (informal) Heterosexual: of, pertaining to, or being a heterosexual person.
  • hettyHenrietta Howland Robinson ("Hetty") 1835–1916, U.S. financier.
  • hexit — (jargon)   /hek'sit/ A hexadecimal digit (0-9, and A-F or a-f). Used by people who claim that there are only *ten* digits, sixteen-fingered human beings being rather rare, despite what some keyboard designs might seem to imply (see space-cadet keyboard).
  • hiest — an informal, simplified spelling of high: hi fidelity.
  • hithe — (obsolete) a landing-place in a river; a harbour or small port.
  • hotel — a commercial establishment offering lodging to travelers and sometimes to permanent residents, and often having restaurants, meeting rooms, stores, etc., that are available to the general public.
  • hythe — a town in E Kent, in SE England: one of the Cinque Ports.
  • keithSir Arthur, 1866–1955, Scottish anthropologist.
  • ketch — a sailing vessel rigged fore and aft on two masts, the larger, forward one being the mainmast and the after one, stepped forward of the rudderpost, being the mizzen or jigger.
  • kheth — het
  • kithe — (archaic, except in Scots) To make known; to reveal.
  • kythe — Common Germanic: Old English c\u00fd\u00f0an (Middle English c\u00fc\u00feen, ky\u00feen, ki\u00feen, ke\u00feen). Old Saxon k\u00fb\u00f0ian.
  • lathe — a machine for use in working wood, metal, etc., that holds the material and rotates it about a horizontal axis against a tool that shapes it.
  • leith — a seaport in SE Scotland, on the Firth of Forth: now part of Edinburgh.
  • letch — a lecherous desire or craving.
  • letha — a female given name.
  • lethe — Classical Mythology. a river in Hades whose water caused forgetfulness of the past in those who drank of it.
  • lieth — Archaic third-person singular form of lie.
  • lithe — bending readily; pliant; limber; supple; flexible: the lithe body of a ballerina.
  • lyeth — Archaic third-person singular form of lye.
  • lythe — (obsolete) soft; flexible.
  • meath — a county in Leinster, in the E Republic of Ireland. 902 sq. mi. (2335 sq. km). County seat: Trim.
  • mehta — Zubin [zoo-bin] /ˈzu bɪn/ (Show IPA), born 1936, Indian orchestra conductor, in the U.S. since 1961.
  • meith — a landmark or boundary marker
  • meth- — indicating a chemical compound derived from methane or containing methyl groups
  • methi — In Indian cooking, fenugreek.
  • metho — (Australia, colloquial) Methylated spirits.
  • meths — methamphetamine; Methedrine.
  • methy — (US, Canada, dated) The burbot.
  • mtech — Master of Technology
  • neath — beneath.
  • neth. — Netherlands
  • other — additional or further: he and one other person.
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