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10-letter words containing r, h, a, e

  • hieromancy — divination through studying objects offered in sacrifice
  • hierophant — (in ancient Greece) an official expounder of rites of worship and sacrifice.
  • hierophany — A physical manifestation of the holy or sacred, serving as a spiritual eidolon for emulation or worship.
  • high water — water at its greatest elevation, as in a river.
  • high-grade — of excellent or superior quality.
  • higher law — an ethical or religious principle considered as taking precedence over the laws of society, and to which one may appeal in order to justify disobedience to a constitution or enacted law with which it conflicts.
  • highjacker — a person who hijacks.
  • highlander — a Gael inhabiting the Highlands of Scotland.
  • hilarities — cheerfulness; merriment; mirthfulness.
  • hildebrandSaint (Hildebrand) c1020–85, Italian ecclesiastic: pope 1073–85.
  • hildegarde — a female given name: from Germanic words meaning “battle” and “protector.”.
  • hillwalker — a person who goes hillwalking
  • hinderance — Archaic spelling of hindrance.
  • hinderland — a type of linen cloth from Europe
  • hinderlans — the buttocks
  • hindrances — Plural form of hindrance.
  • hinterland — Often, hinterlands. the remote or less developed parts of a country; back country: The hinterlands are usually much more picturesque than the urban areas.
  • hired hand — a hired laborer, especially on a farm or ranch; farm hand or ranch hand.
  • hirudinean — any annelid worm of the class Hirudinea, comprising the leeches.
  • hit parade — a listing or category of popular songs ranked according to their popularity with listeners, usually as shown by sales of records.
  • hitherward — hither.
  • hoarseness — having a vocal tone characterized by weakness of intensity and excessive breathiness; husky: the hoarse voice of the auctioneer.
  • hofstadterRichard, 1916–70, U.S. historian.
  • hog badger — a SE Asian badger, Arctonyx collaris, with a piglike mobile snout
  • hold water — a transparent, odorless, tasteless liquid, a compound of hydrogen and oxygen, H 2 O, freezing at 32°F or 0°C and boiling at 212°F or 100°C, that in a more or less impure state constitutes rain, oceans, lakes, rivers, etc.: it contains 11.188 percent hydrogen and 88.812 percent oxygen, by weight.
  • hollowware — silver dishes, as serving dishes, having some depth (distinguished from flatware).
  • holohedral — (of a crystal) having all the planes or faces required by the maximum symmetry of the system to which it belongs.
  • holophrase — a word functioning as a phrase or sentence, as the imperative Go!
  • holy bread — bread used in a Eucharistic service, both before and after consecration.
  • holy water — water blessed by a priest.
  • home brand — an item packaged and marketed under the brand name of a particular retailer, usually a large supermarket chain, rather than that of the manufacturer
  • home guard — a volunteer force used for meeting local emergencies when the regular armed forces are needed elsewhere.
  • home range — the area in which an animal normally lives.
  • home scrap — scrap steel reprocessed in the steel mill in which it was produced.
  • homemakers — Plural form of homemaker.
  • homocercal — having an equally divided tail, characteristic of adult modern bony fishes.
  • homopteran — homopterous.
  • honey bear — a kinkajou.
  • honeyeater — An Australasian songbird with a long brushlike tongue for feeding on nectar.
  • honoraries — Plural form of honorary.
  • honourable — (British spelling) Alternative form of honorable.
  • hoover dam — official name of Boulder Dam.
  • hop garden — a field of hops
  • hopper car — a freight car, usually open at the top and containing one or more hoppers so that bulk cargo can be quickly discharged through its bottom.
  • horse balm — a lemon-scented plant, Collinsonia canadensis, of eastern North America, having small yellow flowers.
  • horse bean — fava bean.
  • horse clam — gaper.
  • horse race — a contest of speed among horses that either are ridden by jockeys or pull sulkies and their drivers.
  • horse rake — a large-wheeled rake drawn by a horse.
  • horse-race — a contest of speed among horses that either are ridden by jockeys or pull sulkies and their drivers.
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