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7-letter words containing h, r, a, d

  • dirhams — Plural form of dirham.
  • dishrag — a dishcloth.
  • dorhawk — nightjar
  • dorlach — a quiver for arrows
  • drachma — a cupronickel coin and monetary unit of modern Greece until the euro was adopted, equal to 100 lepta. Abbreviation: dr., drch.
  • drachms — Plural form of drachm.
  • draught — a drawing, sketch, or design.
  • duarchy — a government or form of government in which power is vested equally in two rulers.
  • dyarchy — diarchy.
  • earthed — (British) Grounded, connected electrically to the ground.
  • endarch — (of a xylem strand) having the first-formed xylem internal to that formed later
  • ephedra — An evergreen shrub of warm, arid regions that has trailing or climbing stems and tiny, scalelike leaves . Some kinds are a source of ephedrine and are used medicinally.
  • exhedra — Alternative form of exedra.
  • go hard — to cause trouble or unhappiness (to)
  • graphed — Simple past tense and past participle of graph.
  • hadarim — plural of heder.
  • hadrian — Adrian VI.
  • hadrome — the part of the xylem of plants that transmits water and nutrients
  • hadrons — Plural form of hadron.
  • haggard — having a gaunt, wasted, or exhausted appearance, as from prolonged suffering, exertion, or anxiety; worn: the haggard faces of the tired troops.
  • hagride — to afflict with worry, dread, need, or the like; torment.
  • hairdos — Plural form of hairdo.
  • halberd — a shafted weapon with an axlike cutting blade, beak, and apical spike, used especially in the 15th and 16th centuries.
  • halyard — any of various lines or tackles for hoisting a spar, sail, flag, etc., into position for use.
  • handcar — a small railroad car or platform on four wheels propelled by a mechanism worked by hand, used on some railroads for inspecting tracks and transporting workers.
  • handers — Plural form of hander.
  • handier — Comparative form of handy.
  • handjar — a knife or dagger from Persia or Turkey
  • handler — a person or thing that handles.
  • handrub — to rub by hand, especially so as to polish: Handrubbing the wood brings out the natural grain.
  • hanford — a city in central California.
  • hansard — the official verbatim published reports of the debates and proceedings in the British Parliament.
  • hard by — near; close by
  • hard on — an erection of the penis.
  • hard up — not soft; solid and firm to the touch; unyielding to pressure and impenetrable or almost impenetrable.
  • hard-on — an erection of the penis.
  • hardass — a person who follows rules and regulations meticulously and enforces them without exceptions.
  • hardbag — a rigid container on a motorcycle
  • hardens — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of harden.
  • hardest — not soft; solid and firm to the touch; unyielding to pressure and impenetrable or almost impenetrable.
  • hardhat — a construction worker, especially a member of a construction workers' union.
  • hardier — capable of enduring fatigue, hardship, exposure, etc.; sturdy; strong: hardy explorers of northern Canada.
  • hardily — in a hardy manner: The plants thrived hardily.
  • hardingChester, 1792–1866, U.S. portrait painter.
  • hardish — Somewhat hard.
  • hardman — (slang) A man who is particularly tough or muscular.
  • hardpan — any layer of firm detrital matter, as of clay, underlying soft soil. Compare caliche, duricrust.
  • hardtop — a style of car having a rigid metal top and no center posts between windows.
  • harried — to harass, annoy, or prove a nuisance to by or as if by repeated attacks; worry: He was harried by constant doubts.
  • harstad — a seaport in W Norway: herring fishing.
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