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8-letter words containing h, u, m

  • durkheim — Émile [ey-meel] /eɪˈmil/ (Show IPA), 1858–1917, French sociologist and philosopher.
  • dutchman — a native or inhabitant of the Netherlands.
  • dzhambul — a city in S Kazakhstan, NE of Chimkent.
  • embushed — Simple past tense and past participle of embush.
  • emu bush — any of various Australian shrubs, esp those of the genus Eremophila (family Myoporaceae), whose fruits are eaten by emus
  • euphuism — An artificial, highly elaborate way of writing or speaking.
  • eurythmy — The harmony of features and proportion in architecture.
  • euthymia — (psychology) A normal, non-depressed, reasonably positive mood; serenity.
  • exhumate — (obsolete) To exhume; to disinter.
  • exhuming — Present participle of exhume.
  • falmouth — a seaport in S Cornwall, in SW England.
  • frumpish — a person who is dowdy, drab, and unattractive.
  • galumphs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of galumph.
  • glumpish — glum
  • graphium — a writing stylus
  • grumphie — a familiar name for a pig.
  • grumpish — Surly; sullen; gruff; grumpy.
  • gum thus — thickened turpentine, used in certain oil paints.
  • gumphion — a funeral banner
  • gumshoed — Simple past tense and past participle of gumshoe.
  • gumshoes — Plural form of gumshoe.
  • gunsmith — a person who makes or repairs firearms.
  • gurmukhi — the script used for writing the Punjabi language
  • halloumi — a salty cheese originating in Cyprus and made from sheep’s or goat’s milk: often grilled or fried because it melts very slowly.
  • halutzim — a person who immigrates to Israel to establish or join a settlement for accomplishing tasks, as clearing the land or planting trees, that are necessary to future development of the country.
  • hame tug — a loop or short leather strap attaching a trace to a hame.
  • hamulate — Furnished with a small hook; hook-shaped.
  • hanumans — Plural form of hanuman.
  • harmfull — Archaic form of harmful.
  • harrumph — to clear the throat audibly in a self-important manner: The professor harrumphed good-naturedly.
  • hegumene — the head of a nunnery of the Eastern Church
  • hegumeny — the office of a hegumen
  • helenium — An American plant of the daisy family that bears many red to yellow flowers, each having a prominent central disk.
  • helium i — colorless liquid helium existing below its boiling point of 4.2 K and above the lambda point of 2.186 K.
  • hemionus — (zoology, obsolete) A wild ass found in Tibet; the kiang.
  • hinduism — the common religion of India, based upon the religion of the original Aryan settlers as expounded and evolved in the Vedas, the Upanishads, the Bhagavad-Gita, etc., having an extremely diversified character with many schools of philosophy and theology, many popular cults, and a large pantheon symbolizing the many attributes of a single god. Buddhism and Jainism are outside the Hindu tradition but are regarded as related religions.
  • hiranuma — Baron Kiichiro [kee-ee-chee-raw] /kiˈi tʃiˌrɔ/ (Show IPA), 1867?–1952, Japanese statesman.
  • hog plum — yellow mombin.
  • homburgs — Plural form of homburg.
  • home run — Baseball. a hit that enables a batter, without the aid of a fielding error, to score a run by making a nonstop circuit of the bases.
  • homespun — spun or made at home: homespun cloth.
  • hoodlums — Plural form of hoodlum.
  • houseman — a male servant who performs general duties in a home, hotel, etc.
  • housemen — Plural form of houseman.
  • hum tone — a note produced by a bell when struck, lying an octave or (in many English bells) a sixth or seventh below the strike tone
  • hum-drum — lacking variety; boring; dull: a humdrum existence.
  • humanely — characterized by tenderness, compassion, and sympathy for people and animals, especially for the suffering or distressed: humane treatment of prisoners.
  • humanics — the study of the nature or affairs of humankind.
  • humanise — to make humane, kind, or gentle.
  • humanism — any system or mode of thought or action in which human interests, values, and dignity predominate.
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