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7-letter words containing i, n, h

  • hoaxing — something intended to deceive or defraud: The Piltdown man was a scientific hoax.
  • hobbing — a projection or shelf at the back or side of a fireplace, used for keeping food warm.
  • hobnail — a large-headed nail for protecting the soles of heavy boots and shoes.
  • hocking — the state of being deposited or held as security; pawn: She was forced to put her good jewelry in hock.
  • hodding — Present participle of hod.
  • hodgkinSir Alan Lloyd, 1914–1998, English biophysicist: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1963.
  • hogging — a hoofed mammal of the family Suidae, order Artiodactyla, comprising boars and swine.
  • hoidens — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of hoiden.
  • hokiang — Older Spelling. Hejiang.
  • hokonui — illicit whisky
  • holbeinHans [hahns] /hɑns/ (Show IPA), ("the elder") 1465?–1524, German painter.
  • hold in — to have or keep in the hand; keep fast; grasp: She held the purse in her right hand. He held the child's hand in his.
  • holding — an act of holding fast by a grasp of the hand or by some other physical means; grasp; grip: Take hold. Do you have a hold on the rope?
  • holguin — a city in NE Cuba.
  • holking — Present participle of holk.
  • home in — move towards a target, etc.
  • hominid — any member of the group consisting of all modern and extinct humans and great apes (including gorillas, chimpanzees, and orangutans) and all their immediate ancestors.
  • hominin — any member of the group consisting of all modern and extinct humans and all their immediate ancestors, specifically species more closely related to modern humans than to chimpanzees.
  • hominum — Misspelling of hominem See usage notes at ad hominem; Latin doesn't change spelling by English rules.
  • homonid — any member of the group consisting of all modern and extinct humans and great apes (including gorillas, chimpanzees, and orangutans) and all their immediate ancestors.
  • honiara — (used with a plural verb) an archipelago in the W Pacific Ocean, E of New Guinea; important World War II battles; politically divided between Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands.
  • honiton — a type of lace with a floral sprig pattern
  • honking — the cry of a goose.
  • hooding — Present participle of hood.
  • hoofing — the horny covering protecting the ends of the digits or encasing the foot in certain animals, as the ox and horse.
  • hooking — Present participle of hook.
  • hooning — Present participle of hoon.
  • hooping — Present participle of hoop.
  • hooting — to cry out or shout, especially in disapproval or derision.
  • hopbind — the stalk or vine on which hops grow
  • hopkinsAnthony, born 1937, English actor, born in Wales.
  • hopping — working energetically; busily engaged: He kept the staff hopping in order to get the report finished.
  • hopvine — the twining stem of the hop plant.
  • hordein — a simple protein of the prolamin class, found in barley grain.
  • hording — a large group, multitude, number, etc.; a mass or crowd: a horde of tourists.
  • horison — Obsolete spelling of horizon.
  • horizon — the line or circle that forms the apparent boundary between earth and sky.
  • horn in — one of the bony, permanent, hollow paired growths, often curved and pointed, that project from the upper part of the head of certain ungulate mammals, as cattle, sheep, goats, or antelopes.
  • hornies — Satan.
  • horning — one of the bony, permanent, hollow paired growths, often curved and pointed, that project from the upper part of the head of certain ungulate mammals, as cattle, sheep, goats, or antelopes.
  • hornish — Somewhat like horn; hard.
  • hornist — Someone who plays the horn (the musical instrument).
  • hornito — a low oven-shaped mound of congealed lava, common in some volcanic districts, emitting hot smoke and vapors in the final stages of activity.
  • horsing — Present participle of horse.
  • hosting — web hosting
  • hotline — hot line.
  • hotlink — a link between two files, as between a spreadsheet and a document, such that a change in one effects a change in the other.
  • hotting — having or giving off heat; having a high temperature: a hot fire; hot coffee.
  • houdiniHarry (Erich Weiss) 1874–1926, U.S. magician.
  • housing — a covering of cloth for the back and flanks of a horse or other animal, for protection or ornament.
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