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7-letter words containing r, u, s, h

  • hurlers — Plural form of hurler.
  • hurleys — Plural form of hurley.
  • hurlies — the game of hurling.
  • hurrahs — Plural form of hurrah.
  • hurrays — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of hurray.
  • hurries — to move, proceed, or act with haste (often followed by up): Hurry, or we'll be late. Hurry up, it's starting to rain.
  • hurstonZora Neale [neel] /nil/ (Show IPA), 1891?–1960, U.S. author and folklorist.
  • hurtles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of hurtle.
  • huskier — Comparative form of husky.
  • hussars — Plural form of hussar.
  • husserl — Edmund (Gustav Albrecht) [et-moo nt goo s-tahf ahl-brekht] /ˈɛt mʊnt ˈgʊs tɑf ˈɑl brɛxt/ (Show IPA), 1859–1938, German philosopher born in Austria.
  • hustler — an enterprising person determined to succeed; go-getter.
  • hydrous — containing water.
  • ischury — (medicine) A retention or suppression of urine.
  • kashrut — the body of dietary laws prescribed for Jews: an observer of kashruth.
  • kurbash — a whip with leather thongs, formerly used in Turkey, Egypt, etc.
  • kurdish — of or relating to the Kurds or their language.
  • kushiro — a city in SE Hokkaido, Japan.
  • kushnerTony, born 1956, U.S. playwright.
  • lurches — Archaic. the act of lurking or state of watchfulness.
  • murkish — slightly murky
  • mushers — Plural form of musher.
  • mushier — Comparative form of mushy.
  • mushrik — A person who rejects Islamic tawhid; an idolater.
  • nerthus — goddess of fertility, described by Tacitus in his Germania: later appeared in Scandinavian mythology as the god Njord.
  • nourish — to sustain with food or nutriment; supply with what is necessary for life, health, and growth.
  • ochrous — Containing ochre.
  • orpheus — Greek Legend. a poet and musician, a son of Calliope, who followed his dead wife, Eurydice, to the underworld. By charming Hades, he obtained permission to lead her away, provided he did not look back at her until they returned to earth. But at the last moment he looked, and she was lost to him forever.
  • outrush — a rapid or intense outflow: an outrush of water from a bursting pipe.
  • phrixus — a child who escaped on the back of a ram with his sister Helle from a plot against them. The fleece of the ram, which he sacrificed, was the Golden Fleece.
  • prudish — excessively proper or modest in speech, conduct, dress, etc.
  • purchasSamuel, 1575?–1626, English writer and editor of travel books.
  • purusha — (in Sankhya and Yoga) one's true self, regarded as eternal and unaffected by external happenings.
  • pushrod — a rod in an overhead-valve engine that is part of the linkage used to open and close the valves.
  • pyrrhus — c318–272 b.c, king of Epirus c300–272.
  • quasher — someone who quells or suppresses
  • rehouse — to house again.
  • rhabdus — a needlelike structure supporting the soft tissue in an invertebrate sponge
  • rhamnus — a member of the Rhamnus genus of trees and shrubs known as buckthorn
  • rhodous — of or containing rhodium (but proportionally more than something rhodic)
  • rhoecus — flourished 6th century b.c, Greek sculptor and architect.
  • rhombus — an oblique-angled equilateral parallelogram; any equilateral parallelogram except a square.
  • roguish — pertaining to, characteristic of, or acting like a rogue; knavish or rascally.
  • rubbish — worthless, unwanted material that is rejected or thrown out; debris; litter; trash.
  • rummish — rather strange, peculiar or odd
  • runtish — an animal that is small or stunted as compared with others of its kind.
  • rushdie — Salman [sal-muh n] /ˈsæl mən/ (Show IPA), born 1947, British novelist and essayist, born in India.
  • rushing — the act of rushing; a rapid, impetuous, or violent onward movement.
  • ruttish — salacious; lustful.
  • sambhur — a deer, Cervus unicolor, of India, Sri Lanka, southeastern Asia, the East Indies, and the Philippines, having three-pointed antlers.
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