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9-letter words containing h, g, e

  • enhancing — Intensify, increase, or further improve the quality, value, or extent of.
  • enlighted — Simple past tense and past participle of enlight.
  • enlighten — Give (someone) greater knowledge and understanding about a subject or situation.
  • enmeshing — Present participle of enmesh.
  • enriching — Improve or enhance the quality or value of.
  • entheogen — A chemical substance, typically of plant origin, that is ingested to produce a nonordinary state of consciousness for religious or spiritual purposes.
  • enthusing — Present participle of enthuse.
  • enwrought — (archaic) Made from (a material).
  • epigraphs — Plural form of epigraph.
  • epigraphy — The study and interpretation of ancient inscriptions.
  • epiphragm — A dry layer of mucus used by a snail or mollusk to seal itself inside its shell during hibernation.
  • ergograph — A graph that shows a relation between human activities, or agricultural/climate factors, and a seasonal year.
  • ermahgerd — (slang, humorous, or, sarcastic) non-gloss An exclamation of excitement, surprise, amazement, or shock.
  • eschewing — Present participle of eschew.
  • esophagus — The part of the alimentary canal that connects the throat to the stomach; the gullet. In humans and other vertebrates it is a muscular tube lined with mucous membrane.
  • ethergate — Multi-protocol Ethernet gateway made by LRT. See Computer Systems, October 1985.
  • ethnogeny — the branch of ethnology that deals with the origin of races or peoples
  • ethnology — The study of the characteristics of various peoples and the differences and relationships between them.
  • euchology — a euchologion
  • exchanged — Simple past tense and past participle of exchange.
  • exchanger — A person or thing that exchanges one thing for another.
  • exchanges — Plural form of exchange.
  • exhorting — Present participle of exhort.
  • eyebright — any scrophulariaceous annual plant of the genus Euphrasia, esp E. nemorosa, having small white-and-purple two-lipped flowers: formerly used in the treatment of eye disorders
  • fathering — a male parent.
  • feng shui — Feng shui is a Chinese art which is based on the belief that the way you arrange things within a building, and within the rooms of that building, can affect aspects of your life such as how happy and successful you are.
  • fermanagh — a county in SW Northern Ireland. 653 sq. mi. (1691 sq. km). County seat: Enniskillen.
  • fetchings — Plural form of fetching.
  • fightable — able or ready to fight
  • firefight — an exchange of gunfire between two opposing forces, especially a skirmish between military forces.
  • firelight — the light from a fire, as on a hearth.
  • fish glue — a type of glue made by prolonged boiling of the connective tissue of fish
  • flaughter — a fluttering
  • flenching — Present participle of flench.
  • fleshings — flesh-colored tights.
  • fleshling — a person whose mind is fixed on fleshly things (usually as opposed to spiritual matters)
  • fletching — the feathers on an arrow, which stabilize it during flight.
  • flightier — Comparative form of flighty.
  • flyweight — a boxer or other contestant of the lightest competitive class, especially a professional boxer weighing up to 112 pounds (51 kg).
  • forenight — (Scotland) The evening, between twilight and bedtime.
  • foreright — (archaic) ready, directly forward, going before.
  • foresight — care or provision for the future; provident care; prudence.
  • foreweigh — to assess in advance
  • forgather — to gather together; convene; assemble.
  • fraughted — Simple past tense and past participle of fraught.
  • freighted — goods, cargo, or lading transported for pay, whether by water, land, or air.
  • freighter — a vessel used mainly for carrying cargo.
  • frenching — of, relating to, or characteristic of France, its inhabitants, or their language, culture, etc.: French cooking.
  • frightens — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of frighten.
  • gaeltacht — any of the regions in Ireland in which Irish Gaelic is the vernacular speech. The form Gaeltacht is sometimes also used to mean the region of Scotland in which Scottish Gaelic is spoken
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