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7-letter words containing r, h, d

  • hot-rod — to drive a hot rod.
  • hovered — to hang fluttering or suspended in the air: The helicopter hovered over the building.
  • hubbardElbert Green, 1856–1915, U.S. author, editor, and printer.
  • huddler — One who huddles.
  • humbird — (obsolete) A hummingbird.
  • humdrum — lacking variety; boring; dull: a humdrum existence.
  • humidor — a container or storage room for cigars or other preparations of tobacco, fitted with means for keeping the tobacco suitably moist.
  • humored — a comic, absurd, or incongruous quality causing amusement: the humor of a situation.
  • hundred — a cardinal number, ten times ten.
  • hurdies — the buttocks or haunches
  • hurdled — Simple past tense and past participle of hurdle.
  • hurdler — An athlete, dog, or horse that runs in hurdle races.
  • hurdles — Take part in a race that involves jumping hurdles.
  • hurried — moving or working rapidly, especially forced or required to hurry, as a person.
  • hurryed — Simple past tense and past participle of hurry; archaic spelling of hurried.
  • hurtled — to rush violently; move with great speed: The car hurtled down the highway.
  • hybrids — Plural form of hybrid.
  • hydrant — an upright pipe with a spout, nozzle, or other outlet, usually in the street, for drawing water from a main or service pipe, especially for fighting fires.
  • hydrase — any of the class of enzymes that catalyze the addition of a water molecule into a compound without causing hydrolysis.
  • hydrate — any of a class of compounds containing chemically combined water. In the case of some hydrates, as washing soda, Na 2 CO 3 ⋅10H 2 O, the water is loosely held and is easily lost on heating; in others, as sulfuric acid, SO 3 ⋅H 2 O, or H 2 SO 4 , it is strongly held as water of constitution.
  • hydride — a binary compound formed by hydrogen and another, usually more electropositive, element or group, as sodium hydride, NaH, or methyl hydride, CH 4 .
  • hydroid — noting or pertaining to that form of hydrozoan that is asexual and grows into branching colonies by budding.
  • hydrops — (formerly) edema.
  • hydrous — containing water.
  • hydroxo — (chemistry, in combination) A hydroxy group as a substituent in a molecule.
  • hydroxy — containing the hydroxyl group.
  • inhered — to exist permanently and inseparably in, as a quality, attribute, or element; belong intrinsically; be inherent: the advantages that inhere in a democratic system.
  • jarhead — a U.S. Marine.
  • jodhpur — Also called Marwar. a former state in NW India, now in Rajasthan.
  • khaddar — a handloomed plain-weave cotton fabric produced in India.
  • kurdish — of or relating to the Kurds or their language.
  • lurched — Archaic. the act of lurking or state of watchfulness.
  • marched — Simple past tense and past participle of march.
  • midrash — an early Jewish interpretation of or commentary on a Biblical text, clarifying or expounding a point of law or developing or illustrating a moral principle.
  • morphed — Linguistics. a sequence of phonemes constituting a minimal unit of grammar or syntax, and, as such, a representation, member, or contextual variant of a morpheme in a specific environment. Compare allomorph (def 2).
  • murdoch — (Dame) (Jean) Iris, 1919–99, British novelist and philosopher, born in Ireland.
  • nerdish — Like a nerd; having the traits of a nerd.
  • np-hard — (complexity)   A set or property of computational search problems. A problem is NP-hard if solving it in polynomial time would make it possible to solve all problems in class NP in polynomial time. Some NP-hard problems are also in NP (these are called "NP-complete"), some are not. If you could reduce an NP problem to an NP-hard problem and then solve it in polynomial time, you could solve all NP problems. See also computational complexity.
  • ochered — any of a class of natural earths, mixtures of hydrated oxide of iron with various earthy materials, ranging in color from pale yellow to orange and red, and used as pigments.
  • ochroid — yellow as ocher.
  • oh lord — Lord is used in exclamations such as 'good Lord!' and 'oh Lord!' to express surprise, shock, frustration, or annoyance about something.
  • ohrmazd — Ahura Mazda.
  • orchard — an area of land devoted to the cultivation of fruit or nut trees.
  • orchids — Plural form of orchid.
  • parched — to make extremely, excessively, or completely dry, as heat, sun, and wind do.
  • perched — a pole or rod, usually horizontal, serving as a roost for birds.
  • phaedra — the wife of Theseus who fell in love with Hippolytus, her stepson, and eventually hanged herself after causing his death.
  • phrased — Grammar. a sequence of two or more words arranged in a grammatical construction and acting as a unit in a sentence. (in English) a sequence of two or more words that does not contain a finite verb and its subject or that does not consist of clause elements such as subject, verb, object, or complement, as a preposition and a noun or pronoun, an adjective and noun, or an adverb and verb.
  • pochard — an Old World diving duck, Aythya ferina, having a chestnut-red head.
  • pradesh — a state, esp a state in the Union of India
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