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5-letter words containing h, g

  • ghoul — an evil demon, originally of Muslim legend, supposed to feed on human beings, and especially to rob graves, prey on corpses, etc.
  • ghusl — (Islam) A full-body wash taken by Muslims to restore the body to a state of purity.
  • ghyll — (Scotland/Northern England) A ravine.
  • girsh — qirsh.
  • girth — the measure around anything; circumference.
  • gitch — (Saskatchewan) Women's or men's underwear.
  • glish — Glish is an interpretive language for building loosely-coupled distributed systems from modular, event-oriented programs. Written by Vern Paxson <[email protected]>. These programs are written in conventional languages such as C, C++, or Fortran. Glish scripts can create local and remote processes and control their communication. Glish also provides a full, array-oriented programming language (similar to S) for manipulating binary data sent between the processes. In general Glish uses a centralised communication model where interprocess communication passes through the Glish interpreter, allowing dynamic modification and rerouting of data values, but Glish also supports point-to-point links between processes when necessary for high performance. Version 2.4.1 includes an interpreter, C++ class library and user manual. It requires C++ and there are ports to SunOS, Ultrix, an HP/UX (rusty).
  • glyph — a pictograph or hieroglyph.
  • gnash — to grind or strike (the teeth) together, especially in rage or pain.
  • goeth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of go.
  • goochGeorge Peabody, 1873–1968, English historian.
  • gosha — (Ireland) hero, champion.
  • gosht — Mutton (or sometimes goat), normally as part of a Pakistani curry.
  • gotch — (Saskatchewan, and, Manitoba, slang) Men's underwear.
  • gotha — a city in S Thuringia, in central Germany.
  • goths — Plural form of goth.
  • graph — a diagram representing a system of connections or interrelations among two or more things by a number of distinctive dots, lines, bars, etc.
  • grith — protection or asylum for a limited period of time, as under church or crown.
  • grush — healthy; thriving.
  • gulch — a deep, narrow ravine, especially one marking the course of a stream or torrent.
  • gunch — /guhnch/ (TMRC) To push, prod, or poke at a device that has almost (but not quite) produced the desired result. Implies a threat to mung.
  • gursh — qirsh.
  • gushy — given to or marked by excessively effusive talk, behavior, etc.
  • gwhis — (web)   A commercial version of NCSA Mosaic for MS Windows 3.x and Windows for Workgroups. GWHIS was released by Quadralay Corporation on 30 September 1994. GWHIS Viewer for Microsoft Windows differs from NCSA Mosaic for Microsoft Windows in several ways including: A hotlist similiar to the X Window System version. Edit Annotation and Delete Annotation work. All Buttons and Menu Items are "greyed out" while files are being retreived and processed. This prevents the user from queing up requests to the TCP/IP stack which causes many crashes. Look and Feel are similiar to the X version. On-line help is complete. Functional Setup program. Greater overall stability.
  • hagar — the mother of Ishmael. Gen. 16.
  • hagen — a city in North Rhine-Westphalia, in W Germany.
  • hagueCape, a cape in NW France, in the English Channel near Cherbourg: the NW extremity of the Cotentin Peninsula.
  • hangi — (New Zealand) A traditional M\u0101ori method of cooking food using heated rocks buried in a pit oven.
  • hangs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of hang.
  • haugh — a stretch of alluvial land forming part of a river valley; bottom land.
  • hedge — a row of bushes or small trees planted close together, especially when forming a fence or boundary; hedgerow: small fields separated by hedges.
  • hedgy — abounding in hedges.
  • hegel — Georg Wilhelm Friedrich [gey-awrk vil-helm free-drikh] /ˈgeɪ ɔrk ˈvɪl hɛlm ˈfri drɪx/ (Show IPA), 1770–1831, German philosopher.
  • hegge — Obsolete form of hedge.
  • heigh — Expressing encouragement or inquiry.
  • helga — a female given name: from a Germanic word meaning “holy.”.
  • helgi — the son of Hjorvard and Svava, a Valkyrie.
  • henge — a Neolithic monument of the British Isles, consisting of a circular area enclosed by a bank and ditch and often containing additional features including one or more circles of upright stone or wood pillars: probably used for ritual purposes or for marking astronomical events, as solstices and equinoxes.
  • heugh — (Scotland) A steep crag or cliff, especially one with overhanging sides.
  • hewgh — a sound made to imitate the flight of an arrow
  • highs — Plural form of high.
  • hight — Archaic. called or named: Childe Harold was he hight.
  • hilog — A higher-order logic programming language. An extension of normal logic programming where predicate symbols may be variable or structured. This allows unification to be performed on the predicate symbols themselves in addition to their arguments.
  • hinge — a jointed device or flexible piece on which a door, gate, shutter, lid, or other attached part turns, swings, or moves.
  • hings — ErrorTitleDiv {.
  • hmong — Miao.
  • hoagy — a hero sandwich.
  • hodge — a typical name for a farm labourer; rustic
  • hoganBen, 1912–97, U.S. golfer.
  • hogen — strong beer or liquor
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