0%

5-letter words containing l, h

  • slush — partly melted snow.
  • stahl — Georg Ernst [gey-ork ernst] /geɪˈɒrk ɛrnst/ (Show IPA), 1660–1734, German chemist and physician.
  • sylph — a slender, graceful woman or girl.
  • thali — a meal consisting of several small meat or vegetable dishes accompanied by rice, bread, etc, and sometimes by a starter or a sweet
  • thelf — an archaic contraction of the elf
  • thilk — pertaining to the thing or person mentioned
  • thill — either of the pair of shafts of a vehicle between which a draft animal is harnessed.
  • thiol — mercaptan.
  • thirl — to pierce.
  • thole — a pin, or either of two pins, inserted into a gunwale to provide a fulcrum for an oar.
  • thule — (italics) Latin. the highest degree attainable.
  • thurl — the hip joint of cattle.
  • tilth — the act or operation of tilling land; tillage.
  • uhelp — A linear programming system.
  • uhlan — one of a group of lancers in a light-cavalry unit, first appearing in Europe in the Polish army.
  • vlach — a member of a people living in scattered communities in the Balkans.
  • walsh — Courtney (Andrew). born 1962, West Indian cricketer, born in Jamaica: a fast bowler, he took 519 wickets in 132 test matches (1984–2001)
  • welch — welsh.
  • welsh — to cheat by failing to pay a gambling debt: You aren't going to welsh on me, are you?
  • whale — any of the larger marine mammals of the order Cetacea, especially as distinguished from the smaller dolphins and porpoises, having a fishlike body, forelimbs modified into flippers, and a head that is horizontally flattened.
  • whall — A light colour of the iris in horses; the state of being walleyed.
  • wheal — a small, burning or itching swelling on the skin, as from a mosquito bite or from hives.
  • wheel — a circular frame or disk arranged to revolve on an axis, as on or in vehicles or machinery.
  • whelk — a pimple or pustule.
  • whelm — to submerge; engulf.
  • whelp — the young of the dog, or of the wolf, bear, lion, tiger, seal, etc.
  • while — a period or interval of time: to wait a long while; He arrived a short while ago.
  • whilk — A kind of mollusk; a whelk.
  • whirl — to turn around, spin, or rotate rapidly: The merry-go-round whirled noisily.
  • whole — comprising the full quantity, amount, extent, number, etc., without diminution or exception; entire, full, or total: He ate the whole pie. They ran the whole distance.
  • wholy — Obsolete form of wholly.
  • whorl — a circular arrangement of like parts, as leaves or flowers, around a point on an axis; verticil.
  • whsle — wholesale
  • whyle — Obsolete spelling of while.
  • xhtml — Extensible HyperText Markup Language
  • zhlob — a clumsy, stupid person.
  • zhlub — a clumsy, stupid person.
  • zilch — zero; nothing: The search came up with zilch.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?