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7-letter words containing r, h, n, e

  • hernial — the protrusion of an organ or tissue through an opening in its surrounding walls, especially in the abdominal region.
  • hernias — Plural form of hernia.
  • heroine — a woman noted for courageous acts or nobility of character: Esther and other biblical heroines.
  • heronry — a place where a colony of herons breeds.
  • herring — an important food fish, Clupea harengus harengus, found in enormous shoals in the North Atlantic.
  • hinders — to cause delay, interruption, or difficulty in; hamper; impede: The storm hindered our progress.
  • hircine — of, relating to, or resembling a goat.
  • hoarsen — (transitive, intransitive) To make or become hoarse.
  • homerun — Alternative form of home run.
  • honkers — Plural form of honker.
  • honored — of, relating to, or noting honor.
  • honoree — a person who receives an honor, award, or special recognition.
  • honorer — One who honors.
  • hordein — a simple protein of the prolamin class, found in barley grain.
  • hordern — Sir Michael (Murray). 1911–95, British actor
  • hormone — Biochemistry. any of various internally secreted compounds, as insulin or thyroxine, formed in endocrine glands, that affect the functions of specifically receptive organs or tissues when transported to them by the body fluids.
  • hornell — a city in S New York.
  • hornest — 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.
  • hornets — Plural form of hornet.
  • hornies — Satan.
  • hornlet — a small horn
  • horrent — bristling; standing erect like bristles.
  • horsens — a port city in central Denmark.
  • hundred — a cardinal number, ten times ten.
  • huneker — James (Gibbons) [gib-uh nz] /ˈgɪb ənz/ (Show IPA), 1860–1921, U.S. music critic and writer.
  • hunkers — to squat on one's heels (often followed by down).
  • hunters — Plural form of hunter.
  • hyperon — any baryon with strangeness other than zero, especially one with a relatively long lifetime.
  • inearth — (transitive, chiefly poetic) To put into the earth; inter.
  • inhaler — an apparatus or device used in inhaling medicinal vapors, anesthetics, etc.
  • 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.
  • inheres — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of inhere.
  • inherit — to take or receive (property, a right, a title, etc.) by succession or will, as an heir: to inherit the family business.
  • inshore — close or closer to the shore.
  • kernish — of, belonging to, or resembling a kern
  • kherson — a port in S Ukraine, on the Dnieper River, on the Black Sea.
  • kushnerTony, born 1956, U.S. playwright.
  • larchen — Of or pertaining to the larch tree.
  • leghorn — English name of Livorno.
  • luncher — Someone who lunches, someone who eats lunch.
  • luthern — a dormer window.
  • lyncher — to put to death, especially by hanging, by mob action and without legal authority.
  • manhire — Bill. born 1946, New Zealand poet and writer. His poetry collections include How to Take Off Your Clothes at the Picnic (1977), Zoetropes (1984), Sunshine (1996), and Lifted (2005)
  • marchen — a German fairy tale or fictional story
  • mchenry — a town in NE Illinois.
  • menhirs — Plural form of menhir.
  • menorah — a candelabrum having seven branches (as used in the Biblical tabernacle or the Temple in Jerusalem), or any number of branches (as used in modern synagogues).
  • moorhen — Also called water hen. a common species of gallinule, Gallinule chloropus, of nearly worldwide distribution.
  • muncher — to chew with steady or vigorous working of the jaws, often audibly.
  • mynheer — Dutch. the term of address and title of respect corresponding to sir and Mr.
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