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5-letter words containing h, i, l

  • -lith — indicating stone or rock
  • -phil — -phile
  • alish — Resembling or characteristic of ale.
  • bhili — an Indic language of west central India, the language of the Bhil.
  • bligh — William. 1754–1817, British admiral; Governor of New South Wales (1806–9), deposed by the New South Wales Corps: as a captain, commander of H.M.S. Bounty when the crew mutinied in 1789
  • bphil — Bachelor of Philosophy
  • chiel — a young man; lad
  • chil- — chilo-
  • child — A child is a human being who is not yet an adult.
  • chile — a republic in South America, on the Pacific, with a total length of about 4090 km (2650 miles) and an average width of only 177 km (110 miles): gained independence from Spain in 1818; the government of President Allende (elected 1970) attempted the implementation of Marxist policies within a democratic system until overthrown by a military coup (1973); democracy restored 1988. Chile consists chiefly of the Andes in the east, the Atacama Desert in the north, a central fertile region, and a huge S region of almost uninhabitable mountains, glaciers, fjords, and islands; an important producer of copper, iron ore, nitrates, etc. Language: Spanish. Religion: Roman Catholic majority. Currency: peso. Capital: Santiago. Pop: 17 216 945 (2013 est). Area: 756 945 sq km (292 256 sq miles)
  • chili — the dried pod of red pepper, a very hot seasoning
  • chill — When you chill something or when it chills, you lower its temperature so that it becomes colder but does not freeze.
  • chirl — a trilling or quavering sound
  • choil — An unsharpened section of a knife blade in front of the guard on the blade.
  • choli — a short-sleeved bodice, as worn by Indian women
  • delhi — the capital of India, in the N central part, on the Jumna river: consists of Old Delhi (a walled city reconstructed in 1639 on the site of former cities of Delhi, which date from the 15th century bc) and New Delhi to the south, chosen as the capital in 1912, replacing Kolkata (then called Calcutta); university (1922). Pop: 9 817 439 (2001)
  • dphil — Doctor of Philosophy
  • elihu — one of Job's visitors in his affliction: Job 32-37
  • filch — to steal (especially something of small value); pilfer: to filch ashtrays from fancy restaurants.
  • filth — offensive or disgusting dirt or refuse; foul matter: the filth dumped into our rivers.
  • 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).
  • haill — Obsolete spelling of hail.
  • hails — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of hail.
  • haily — relating to or comprising hail
  • halid — (zoology) Any member of the Halidae.
  • helgi — the son of Hjorvard and Svava, a Valkyrie.
  • heli- — helicopter
  • helio — a heliogram.
  • helix — a spiral.
  • hibol — (language)   A variant of DIBOL, used in Infotec computers. HIBOL was considered to be a very high level language and significantly easier to maintain than COBOL. It uses a single type of data object, called a flow, which is an indexed stream of data values. Computation is expressed as operations acting on flows.
  • hield — (transitive) To bend; incline; tilt (as a water-vessel or ship); heel.
  • hilal — Of or pertaining to a hilum.
  • hilar — Botany. the mark or scar on a seed produced by separation from its funicle or placenta. the nucleus of a granule of starch.
  • hilch — to limp or hobble
  • hilda — a female given name: from a Germanic word meaning “maid of battle.”.
  • hilla — a city in central Iraq, S of Baghdad.
  • hillo — Obsolete form of hello.
  • hills — Ambrose Powell [pou-uh l] /ˈpaʊ əl/ (Show IPA), 1825–65, Confederate general in the U.S. Civil War.
  • hilly — full of hills; having many hills; hilly country.
  • 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.
  • hilts — Plural form of hilt.
  • hilum — Botany. the mark or scar on a seed produced by separation from its funicle or placenta. the nucleus of a granule of starch.
  • hilus — An indentation in the surface of a kidney, spleen, or other organ, where blood vessels, ducts, nerve fibers, etc., enter or leave it.
  • hiply — In a hip way.
  • hlisp — "Monocopy and Associative Algorithms in an Extended Lisp", E. Goto, U Tokyo May 1974.
  • holie — Archaic spelling of holy.
  • hubli — a city in W India, in NW Mysore: incorporated with Dharwar in 1961; educational and trading centre. Pop (with Dharwar): 786 018 (2001)
  • 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.
  • huilaMount, a volcano in central Colombia. 18,700 feet (5700 meters).
  • hylic — of or relating to matter; material or solid, having a physical form

On this page, we collect all 5-letter words with H-I-L. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 5-letter word that contains in H-I-L to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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