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6-letter words containing h, g

  • hungry — having a desire, craving, or need for food; feeling hunger.
  • hungus — (jargon)   /huhng'g*s/ (Perhaps related to slang "humongous") Large, unwieldy, usually unmanageable. E.g. "TCP is a hungus piece of code."
  • hutong — A narrow lane or alleyway in a traditional residential area of a Chinese city, especially Beijing.
  • hwange — a town in W Zimbabwe: coal mines. Pop: 42 581 (1992)
  • hygeia — the Greek goddess of health
  • hygric — of or relating to moisture.
  • hygro- — indicating moisture
  • hyping — to stimulate, excite, or agitate (usually followed by up): She was hyped up at the thought of owning her own car.
  • ichang — Wade-Giles. Yichang.
  • ingush — a member of a Sunni Muslim people living north of the Caucasus Mountains, closely related to the Chechen.
  • jaghir — (East India) An assignment of the produce and income of a particular district or village to a person or persons, as an annuity; also, the district itself.
  • jiggeh — An open-framed triangular backpack made of branches or twigs, used in Korea.
  • kangha — the comb traditionally worn by Sikhs as a symbol of their religious and cultural loyalty: originally worn to keep the hair clean
  • khagan — A khan of khans, a ruler of a khaganate; (a holder of) an imperial rank used among certain Turkic and Mongolian peoples, equal in status to an emperor.
  • kiaugh — trouble or worry.
  • knightEric, 1897–1943, U.S. novelist, born in England.
  • knyght — Obsolete spelling of knight.
  • lagash — an ancient Sumerian city between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, at the modern village of Telloh in SE Iraq: a palace, statuary, and inscribed clay tablets unearthed here.
  • laughs — Plural form of laugh.
  • laught — (obsolete) Simple past tense and past participle of laugh.
  • laughy — tending to laugh a lot or to make people laugh a lot
  • lehigh — a river in E Pennsylvania, flowing SW and SE into the Delaware River. 103 miles (165 km) long.
  • lehnga — A long formal or ceremonial skirt worn by Indian women.
  • length — the longest extent of anything as measured from end to end: the length of a river.
  • lights — a light product, as a beer or cigarette.
  • lighty — (obsolete) illuminated.
  • loughs — Plural form of lough.
  • lyghte — Obsolete spelling of light.
  • lynagh — Michael. born 1963, Australian Rugby Union player; won 72 caps (1984–95) and scored 911 points (an Australian record)
  • meghan — a female given name.
  • megohm — a unit of resistance, equal to one million ohms. Symbol: MΩ; Abbreviation: meg.
  • mights — Plural form of might.
  • mighty — having, characterized by, or showing superior power or strength: mighty rulers.
  • minhag — a custom or procedure among Jews that is so firmly established as to have almost the binding force of law.
  • moghul — any of the Mongol conquerors of India who established an empire that lasted from 1526 to 1857, but held only nominal power after 1803. See also Great Mogul.
  • mought — (obsolete, outside, US dialects) Alternative form of might.
  • mughal — any of the Mongol conquerors of India who established an empire that lasted from 1526 to 1857, but held only nominal power after 1803. See also Great Mogul.
  • mugham — A folk musical composition of Azerbaijan in a complex form that weds classical poetry and musical improvisation.
  • naught — nothing.
  • neighs — Plural form of neigh.
  • niggah — Alternative spelling of nigga.
  • nigher — near in space, time, or relation: The time draws nigh.
  • nighly — nearly, almost
  • nights — at or during the night regularly or frequently: He worked during the day and wrote nights.
  • nighty — nightie.
  • nought — nothing.
  • ogrish — a monster in fairy tales and popular legend, usually represented as a hideous giant who feeds on human flesh.
  • ohmage — electric resistance expressed in ohms.
  • oohing — Present participle of ooh.
  • oughta — (colloquial, or, dialectical) Ought to.
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