5-letter words containing h, g
- hoggs — Plural form of hogg.
- hoggy — (of character) hoggish.
- hogue — a roadstead off the NW coast of France; naval battle, 1692.
- hongi — a Maori greeting in which noses are pressed together.
- hoogh — Pieter de [Dutch pee-ter duh] /Dutch ˈpi tər də/ (Show IPA), Hooch, Pieter de.
- hough — Emerson, 1857–1923, U.S. novelist.
- hp-gl — Hewlett-Packard Graphics Language
- huang — river in N China, flowing from Tibet into the Gulf of Bo Hai: c. 3,395 mi (5,464 km)
- hudge — (mining) A bucket for hoisting coal or ore.
- hugel — Baron Friedrich von, 1852–1925, English theologian and writer.
- huger — extraordinarily large in bulk, quantity, or extent: a huge ship; a huge portion of ice cream.
- huggy — Tending to hug; affectionate in a physical way.
- hugin — one of the two ravens of Odin that brought him news from the whole world.
- hugli — a river in NE India, in W Bengal: the westernmost channel by which the Ganges enters the Bay of Bengal. 160 miles (258 km) long.
- hygge — the practice of creating cosy and congenial environments that promote emotional wellbeing
- hying — past participle of hie.
- hyleg — the dominant planet when someone is born which is said to determine the length of their life
- krogh — (Schack) Auguste (Steenberg) [shahk ou-goo st steen-barg] /ˈʃɑk ˈaʊ gʊst ˈstin bærg/ (Show IPA), 1874–1949, Danish physiologist: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1920.
- laigh — a small valley or hollow.
- laugh — to express mirth, pleasure, derision, or nervousness with an audible, vocal expulsion of air from the lungs that can range from a loud burst of sound to a series of quiet chuckles and is usually accompanied by characteristic facial and bodily movements.
- leigh — Vivien (Vivian Mary Hartley) 1913–67, English actress.
- light — a light product, as a beer or cigarette.
- lough — a lake.
- might — physical strength: He swung with all his might.
- murgh — (in Indian cookery) chicken.
- neigh — to utter the cry of a horse; whinny.
- night — the period of darkness between sunset and sunrise.
- ogham — an alphabetical script used originally for inscriptions in an archaic form of Irish, from about the 5th to the 10th centuries.
- ohing — the exclamation “oh.”.
- omagh — a market town in Northern Ireland. Pop: 19 910 (2001)
- ought — a cipher (0); zero.
- phag- — phago-
- phage — bacteriophage.
- phigs — Programmers Hierarchical Interactive Graphics System
- pight — to pitch or set up (a tent)
- plugh — (games) /ploogh/ A magic word from the ADVENT game.
- right — in accordance with what is good, proper, or just: right conduct.
- rough — having a coarse or uneven surface, as from projections, irregularities, or breaks; not smooth: rough, red hands; a rough road.
- sangh — (in India) an association or union, esp a political or labour organization
- saugh — sallow2 .
- sghwr — steam-generating heavy-water reactor
- shang — a Chinese dynasty whose dates are usually given as 1766–1122 b.c. and sometimes as 1523–1027 b.c.
- shogi — the Japanese version of chess.
- shogs — to shake; jolt.
- shrug — to raise and contract (the shoulders), expressing indifference, disdain, etc.
- sight — the power or faculty of seeing; perception of objects by use of the eyes; vision.
- singh — a title assumed by a Sikh when he becomes a full member of the community
- sough — to make a rushing, rustling, or murmuring sound: the wind soughing in the meadow.
- teugh — tough
- thegn — Early English History. a member of any of several aristocratic classes of men ranking between earls and ordinary freemen, and granted lands by the king or by lords for military service.