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6-letter words containing h, g

  • ghazal — (in Middle Eastern and Indian literature and music) a lyric poem with a fixed number of verses and a repeated rhyme, typically on the theme of love, and normally set to music.
  • ghazis — Plural form of ghazi.
  • ghazwa — (Islam) Any of the battles in which the Islamic prophet Muhammad personally participated.
  • gheber — Gabar.
  • gherao — (India) A protest in which a group of people surrounds a politician, building, etc. until demands are met.
  • ghetti — Irregular plural form of ghetto.
  • ghetto — a section of a city, especially a thickly populated slum area, inhabited predominantly by members of an ethnic or other minority group, often as a result of social or economic restrictions, pressures, or hardships.
  • ghibli — a hot dust-bearing wind of the North African desert.
  • ghirsh — qirsh.
  • ghosts — the soul of a dead person, a disembodied spirit imagined, usually as a vague, shadowy or evanescent form, as wandering among or haunting living persons.
  • ghosty — (chiefly, informal) ghostly.
  • ghouls — Plural form of ghoul.
  • girths — Plural form of girth.
  • girthy — Of significant girth; wide.
  • giveth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of give.
  • glitch — a defect or malfunction in a machine or plan.
  • gluish — resembling, or having the properties of, glue
  • glunch — a frown
  • glutch — to swallow.
  • glyphs — Plural form of glyph.
  • goethe — Johann Wolfgang von [yoh-hahn vawlf-gahng fuh n] /ˈyoʊ hɑn ˈvɔlf gɑŋ fən/ (Show IPA), 1749–1832, German poet, dramatist, novelist, and philosopher.
  • golosh — a waterproof overshoe, especially a high one.
  • gopher — an employee whose chief duty is running errands.
  • gorham — a town in SW Maine.
  • gorhen — a female red grouse
  • goshen — a pastoral region in Lower Egypt, occupied by the Israelites before the Exodus. Gen. 45:10.
  • gotcha — I have got you (used to express satisfaction at having captured or defeated someone or uncovered their faults).
  • gotham — a journalistic nickname for New York City.
  • gothic — (usually initial capital letter) noting or pertaining to a style of architecture, originating in France in the middle of the 12th century and existing in the western half of Europe through the middle of the 16th century, characterized by the use of the pointed arch and the ribbed vault, by the use of fine woodwork and stonework, by a progressive lightening of structure, and by the use of such features as flying buttresses, ornamental gables, crockets, and foils.
  • goyish — being, pertaining to, or characteristic of a goy or goys: explaining Passover to my goyish boss; a goyish version of chicken soup.
  • graham — made of graham flour.
  • graith — equipment; apparatus; belongings
  • granth — the sacred scripture of the Sikhs, original text compiled 1604.
  • graphs — Plural form of graph.
  • grinch — a person or thing that spoils or dampens the pleasure of others.
  • gritch — /grich/ 1. A complaint (often caused by a glitch). 2. To complain. Often verb-doubled: "Gritch gritch". 3. A synonym for glitch (as verb or noun).
  • grouch — to be sulky or morose; show discontent; complain, especially in an irritable way.
  • grough — a natural channel or fissure in a peat moor; a peat hag
  • growth — the act or process, or a manner of growing; development; gradual increase.
  • grumph — to grunt
  • grunth — the sacred scripture of the Sikhs, original text compiled 1604.
  • grutch — To murmur, complain.
  • guache — Alternative spelling of gouache.
  • gubbah — a white person.
  • guelph — a city in SE Ontario, in S Canada.
  • gullah — a member of a population of black Americans inhabiting the Sea Islands and the coastal regions of South Carolina, Georgia, and northeastern Florida.
  • gungho — Alternative spelling of gung ho.
  • gunshy — Being afraid to use a gun.
  • gunyah — an aboriginal hut or shelter.
  • gurkha — a member of a Rajput people, Hindu in religion, who achieved dominion over Nepal in the 18th century.
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