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9-letter words containing h, i, n, d, e

  • tight end — an offensive player positioned at one extremity of the line directly beside a tackle, used as both a blocker and a pass receiver.
  • trainshed — (in a railroad station) a shelter completely covering railroad tracks and their adjoining platforms.
  • trihedron — the figure determined by three planes meeting in a point.
  • trondheim — a seaport in central Norway, on Trondheim Fiord.
  • unchained — to fasten or secure with a chain: to chain a dog to a post.
  • unchilled — coldness, especially a moderate but uncomfortably penetrating coldness: the chill of evening.
  • uncliched — not cliched
  • undelight — the absence of delight
  • underfish — to catch fewer fish than the maximum amount permitted
  • underhair — a growth of short hair lying beneath a longer growth; undercoat.
  • ungirthed — the measure around anything; circumference.
  • unharried — to harass, annoy, or prove a nuisance to by or as if by repeated attacks; worry: He was harried by constant doubts.
  • unheedily — carelessly
  • unheeding — to give careful attention to: He did not heed the warning.
  • unhurried — not hurried; leisurely; deliberate: an unhurried day; an unhurried decision.
  • unlighted — not made to start burning; unlit; unignited
  • unshifted — (of a keyboard shift key) not pressed or activated.
  • unshipped — not shipped, as goods.
  • unshirted — not wearing a shirt
  • unsighted — having functional vision; not blind.
  • unweighed — not weighed, as for poundage.
  • unwhipped — not whipped
  • varnished — a preparation consisting of resinous matter, as copal or lac, dissolved in an oil (oil varnish) or in alcohol (spirit varnish) or other volatile liquid. When applied to the surface of wood, metal, etc., it dries and leaves a hard, more or less glossy, usually transparent coating.
  • wheedling — to endeavor to influence (a person) by smooth, flattering, or beguiling words or acts: We wheedled him incessantly, but he would not consent.
  • windchest — a chamber containing the air supply for the reeds or pipes of an organ.
  • windchime — A chime constructed from suspended tubes, rods, bells, etc., often hung outside a building or residence as a visual and aural ornament to be played by the wind.
  • windhover — the kestrel, Falco tinnunculus.
  • windshake — a crack between the annual rings in wood: caused by strong winds bending the tree trunk
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