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10-letter words containing k, h

  • hog sucker — any of several suckers of the genus Hypentelium, inhabiting cool streams of eastern North America and characterized by a broad head that is concave above.
  • hog-backed — cambered, as the ridge of a roof, a hill, etc.
  • hokeypokey — (US) A group dance performed in a circle, in which people move various of their body parts in and out of the middle, and shake them about.
  • hollyhocks — Plural form of hollyhock.
  • home-baked — baked at home; home-made
  • homemakers — Plural form of homemaker.
  • homemaking — the establishment or management of a home; duties of a homemaker.
  • homeworker — a person who works at home for pay, especially a pieceworker.
  • honky-tonk — a cheap, noisy, and garish nightclub or dance hall.
  • hoodwinked — to deceive or trick.
  • hoodwinker — One who hoodwinks.
  • hook check — a maneuver for depriving an opponent of the puck by seizing it in the crook of one's stick. Compare check1 (def 37).
  • hooked rug — a rug made by drawing loops of yarn or cloth through a foundation of burlap or the like, to form a pattern.
  • hookedness — The condition of being bent like a hook; incurvation.
  • hooktender — (in lumbering) the supervisor of a rigging crew.
  • hoop skirt — a woman's skirt made to stand out and drape in a stiff bell-like shape from the waist by an undergarment framework of flexible hoops connected by tapes.
  • hoop snake — any of several harmless snakes, as the mud snake and rainbow snake, fabled to take its tail in its mouth and roll along like a hoop.
  • hoop-skirt — a skirt that has hoops made of bone or metal, etc fastened inside it to make it stiff and full
  • hop-picker — a person employed or a machine used to pick hops
  • hopsacking — bagging made chiefly of hemp and jute.
  • horkheimer — Max. 1895–1973, German social theorist of the Frankfurt school. His books include Eclipse of Reason (1947) and Critical Theory (1968)
  • horse rake — a large-wheeled rake drawn by a horse.
  • hot ticket — an extremely popular or trendy person or thing; a person or thing in high demand.
  • hot-walker — a person whose job is walking racehorses after races, workouts, etc. to allow them to cool off gradually
  • hotel rack — rack6 (def 2).
  • hotel work — any of various jobs required in a hotel, such as receptionists, waiters, etc
  • house dick — house detective.
  • house mark — a trademark that appears on and identifies all of a company's products.
  • housebreak — to train (a pet) to excrete outdoors or in a specific place.
  • housebroke — Simple past form of housebreak.
  • houseleeks — Plural form of houseleek.
  • housemaker — Homemaker.
  • hucklebone — hipbone.
  • huckstered — Simple past tense and past participle of huckster.
  • hucksterer — huckster.
  • huckstress — A female huckster.
  • hula skirt — a skirt made of long stems of grass bound to a waistband, worn typically by a Hawaiian hula dancer.
  • humpbacked — having a hump on the back.
  • hunchbacks — Plural form of hunchback.
  • hunky-dory — about as well as one could wish or expect; satisfactory; fine; OK.
  • huntiegowk — a fool's errand or a person sent on an April fool's errand
  • hydrocrack — to crack (petroleum or the like) in the presence of hydrogen.
  • hyperlinks — Plural form of hyperlink.
  • hyson skin — the inferior leaves of a Chinese green tea
  • hystericky — prone to or characterized by hysteria
  • ice hockey — a game played on ice between two teams of six skaters each, the object being to score goals by shooting a puck into the opponents' cage using a stick with a wooden blade set at an obtuse angle to the shaft.
  • imran khan — full name Imran Ahmad Khan Niazi. born 1952, Pakistani cricketer and politician: an all-rounder, he played in 88 test matches and captained Pakistan to victory in the 1992 World Cup
  • in hock to — If you are in hock to someone, you feel you have to do things for them because they have given you money or support.
  • intershock — To shock mutually, as if by collision.
  • jack chain — a chain having open links in the form of a figure 8, with one loop at right angles to the other.
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