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7-letter words containing r, h, g

  • hamburg — a sandwich consisting of a cooked patty of ground or chopped beef, usually in a roll or bun, variously garnished.
  • hangars — Plural form of hangar.
  • hangers — a shoulder-shaped frame with a hook at the top, usually of wire, wood, or plastic, for draping and hanging a garment when not in use.
  • hardbag — a rigid container on a motorcycle
  • hardingChester, 1792–1866, U.S. portrait painter.
  • harking — to listen attentively; hearken.
  • harling — Present participle of harl.
  • harming — Present participle of harm.
  • harping — a musical instrument consisting of a triangular frame formed by a soundbox, a pillar, and a curved neck, and having strings stretched between the soundbox and the neck that are plucked with the fingers.
  • headrig — (in a sawmill) the carriage and saw used in cutting a log into slabs.
  • hearing — the faculty or sense by which sound is perceived.
  • hedgers — Plural form of hedger.
  • hegiras — Plural form of hegira.
  • heiring — a person who inherits or has a right of inheritance in the property of another following the latter's death.
  • herbage — nonwoody vegetation.
  • herding — a herdsman (usually used in combination): a cowherd; a goatherd; a shepherd.
  • herling — (UK, dialect) The young of the sea trout.
  • herring — an important food fish, Clupea harengus harengus, found in enormous shoals in the North Atlantic.
  • hertzog — James Barry Munnik [mœn-uh k] /ˈmœn ək/ (Show IPA). South African statesman and general: prime minister 1924–39.
  • higgler — a peddler or huckster.
  • highter — Archaic. called or named: Childe Harold was he hight.
  • hirings — Plural form of hiring, present participle of 'hire'.
  • hirling — a salmon trout
  • hogarthWilliam, 1697–1764, English painter and engraver.
  • hoggery — piggery.
  • holberg — Ludvig, Baron. 1684–1754, Danish playwright, poet, and historian, born in Norway: considered the founder of modern Danish literature
  • homager — a vassal.
  • homburg — a man's felt hat with a soft crown dented lengthwise and a slightly rolled brim.
  • hording — a large group, multitude, number, etc.; a mass or crowd: a horde of tourists.
  • hornbag — a promiscuous woman
  • horndog — A man with strong sexual desires.
  • 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.
  • horsing — Present participle of horse.
  • huggler — Agent noun of huggle; one who huggles.
  • hungary — a republic in central Europe. 35,926 sq. mi. (93,050 sq. km). Capital: Budapest.
  • hurling — a forcible or violent throw; fling.
  • hurting — to cause bodily injury to; injure: He was badly hurt in the accident.
  • hygroma — a swelling in the soft tissue that occurs over a joint, usually caused by repeated injury
  • jaghire — Alternative spelling of jaghir.
  • kirghiz — a member of a formerly nomadic people dwelling chiefly in Kirghizia (Kyrgyzstan).
  • largish — rather large.
  • laugher — a person who laughs.
  • leghorn — English name of Livorno.
  • lighter — a light product, as a beer or cigarette.
  • maghreb — the Arabic name for the NW part of Africa, generally including Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, and sometimes Libya.
  • mcgrath — Glenn (Donald). born 1970, Australian cricketer: played 124 test matches (1993–2007) and took 563 wickets, a record for a fast bowler
  • mighter — Comparative form of might.
  • murghob — a river in NE Afghanistan and SE Turkmenistan, flowing from the Hindu Kush W and NW to the Kara Kum Desert. 530 miles (853 km) long.
  • murragh — a large caddis fly, Phryganea grandis, of still and running water, esteemed by trout
  • nighter — (only in combinations) Someone or something who does something for a certain number of nights.
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