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7-letter words containing h, u

  • quashes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of quash.
  • queachy — unwell
  • quechan — Yuma (defs 1, 2).
  • quechua — the language of the Inca civilization, presently spoken by about 7 million people in Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia, Chile, and Argentina.
  • quetsch — Horticulture. a variety of plum.
  • quiches — Plural form of quiche.
  • quichua — Quechua.
  • quinche — to move, to wince
  • quothed — said (used with nouns, and with first- and third-person pronouns, and always placed before the subject): Quoth the raven, “Nevermore.”.
  • raunchy — vulgar or smutty; crude; earthy; obscene: a raunchy joke.
  • rehouse — to house again.
  • retouch — to improve with new touches, highlights, or the like; touch up or rework, as a painting or makeup.
  • reutherWalter Philip, 1907–70, U.S. labor leader: president of the UAW 1946–70; president of the CIO 1952–55.
  • rhabdus — a needlelike structure supporting the soft tissue in an invertebrate sponge
  • rhamnus — a member of the Rhamnus genus of trees and shrubs known as buckthorn
  • rhenium — a rare metallic element of the manganese subgroup: used, because of its high melting point, in platinum-rhenium thermocouples. Symbol: Re; atomic number: 75; atomic weight: 186.2.
  • rheumic — of or relating to rheum
  • rhodium — a silvery-white metallic element of the platinum family, forming salts that give rose-colored solutions: used to electroplate microscopes and instrument parts to prevent corrosion. Symbol: Rh; atomic weight: 102.905; atomic number: 45; specific gravity: 12.5 at 20°C.
  • rhodous — of or containing rhodium (but proportionally more than something rhodic)
  • rhoecus — flourished 6th century b.c, Greek sculptor and architect.
  • rhombus — an oblique-angled equilateral parallelogram; any equilateral parallelogram except a square.
  • rhubarb — any of several plants belonging to the genus Rheum, of the buckwheat family, as R. officinale, having a medicinal rhizome, and R. rhabarbarum, having edible leafstalks.
  • roguish — pertaining to, characteristic of, or acting like a rogue; knavish or rascally.
  • roughen — make rough
  • rougher — something that is rough, especially rough ground.
  • roughie — a small food fish of the family Arripididae, found in southern and western Australian waters
  • roughly — having a coarse or uneven surface, as from projections, irregularities, or breaks; not smooth: rough, red hands; a rough road.
  • rouhani — Hassan (hæˈsɑːn). born 1948, Iranian politician; president of Iran from 2013
  • routhie — abundant, plentiful, or well filled
  • rubbish — worthless, unwanted material that is rejected or thrown out; debris; litter; trash.
  • ruching — material for making a ruche.
  • rudolph — 1218–91, king of Germany and emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 1273–91: founder of the Hapsburg dynasty.
  • rummish — rather strange, peculiar or odd
  • runtish — an animal that is small or stunted as compared with others of its kind.
  • rushdie — Salman [sal-muh n] /ˈsæl mən/ (Show IPA), born 1947, British novelist and essayist, born in India.
  • rushing — the act of rushing; a rapid, impetuous, or violent onward movement.
  • ruthful — compassionate or sorrowful.
  • ruttish — salacious; lustful.
  • sambhur — a deer, Cervus unicolor, of India, Sri Lanka, southeastern Asia, the East Indies, and the Philippines, having three-pointed antlers.
  • schlump — a dull, colorless person.
  • schmuck — an obnoxious or contemptible person.
  • schmutz — dirt; filth; garbage.
  • schultzDutch, nickname of Arthur Flegenheimer.
  • schuman — Robert [rob-ert;; French raw-ber] /ˈrɒb ərt;; French rɔˈbɛr/ (Show IPA), 1886–1963, French political leader: premier of France 1947–48.
  • scrauch — to squawk loudly
  • scrunch — to crunch, crush, or crumple.
  • scultch — culch (def 3).
  • scyphus — a cup-shaped part, as of a flower.
  • shackup — an instance of shacking up: The census people counted both marriages and shackups.
  • shakeup — A shakeup is a major set of changes in an organization or a system.
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