6-letter words containing s, e, h
- snathe — the shaft or handle of a scythe.
- sneesh — snuff1 (def 9).
- soothe — to tranquilize or calm, as a person or the feelings; relieve, comfort, or refresh: soothing someone's anger; to soothe someone with a hot drink.
- sopher — scribe1 (def 3).
- sophie — a female given name.
- spathe — a bract or pair of bracts, often large and colored, subtending or enclosing a spadix or flower cluster.
- speech — the faculty or power of speaking; oral communication; ability to express one's thoughts and emotions by speech sounds and gesture: Losing her speech made her feel isolated from humanity.
- spetch — a piece of animal skin or leather
- sphene — a mineral, calcium titanium silicate, CaTiSiO 5 , occurring as an accessory mineral in a variety of crystalline rocks, usually in small wedge-shaped crystals.
- sphere — Geometry. a solid geometric figure generated by the revolution of a semicircle about its diameter; a round body whose surface is at all points equidistant from the center. Equation: x 2 + y 2 + z 2 = r 2 . the surface of such a figure; a spherical surface.
- sphery — having the form of a sphere; spherelike.
- stench — an offensive smell or odor; stink.
- stheno — one of the three Gorgons
- stythe — chokedamp.
- sucher — of the kind, character, degree, extent, etc., of that or those indicated or implied: Such a man is dangerous.
- sughed — sough2 .
- swathe — to wrap, bind, or swaddle with bands of some material; wrap up closely or fully.
- sypher — to join (boards having beveled edges) so as to make a flush surface.
- taches — a buckle; clasp.
- tehsil — an administrative region of India
- tethys — Classical Mythology. a Titan, a daughter of Uranus and Gaea, the wife of Oceanus and mother of the Oceanids and river gods.
- thales — c640–546? b.c, Greek philosopher, born in Miletus.
- thames — a river in S England, flowing E through London to the North Sea. 209 miles (336 km) long.
- thebes — a district in ancient Greece, NW of Athens. Capital: Thebes.
- theirs — any male person or animal; a man: hes and shes.
- theism — the belief in one God as the creator and ruler of the universe, without rejection of revelation (distinguished from deism).
- theist — the belief in one God as the creator and ruler of the universe, without rejection of revelation (distinguished from deism).
- themis — a goddess of order and justice
- theos. — theosophical
- theres — in or at that place (opposed to here): She is there now.
- theses — a proposition stated or put forward for consideration, especially one to be discussed and proved or to be maintained against objections: He vigorously defended his thesis on the causes of war.
- thesis — a proposition stated or put forward for consideration, especially one to be discussed and proved or to be maintained against objections: He vigorously defended his thesis on the causes of war.
- thess. — Thessalonians
- thetis — a Nereid, the wife of Peleus and the mother of Achilles.
- thiers — Louis Adolphe [lwee a-dawlf] /lwi aˈdɔlf/ (Show IPA), 1797–1877, French statesman: president 1871–73.
- thisbe — Pyramus and Thisbe.
- thresh — to separate the grain or seeds from (a cereal plant or the like) by some mechanical means, as by beating with a flail or by the action of a threshing machine.
- throes — a violent spasm or pang; paroxysm.
- thyrse — a compact branching inflorescence, as of the lilac, in which the main axis is indeterminate and the lateral axes are determinate.
- tosher — a person who scavenged in the sewers in Victorian London
- tusche — a greaselike liquid used in lithography as a medium receptive to lithographic ink, and in etching and silkscreen as a resist.
- tushes — tushie.
- tushie — the buttocks.
- unmesh — any knit, woven, or knotted fabric of open texture.
- unshed — not spilled or caused to flow
- unshoe — to remove the shoes from
- ushers — a person who escorts people to seats in a theater, church, etc.
- ussher — James, 1581–1656, Irish prelate and scholar.
- vishes — to try to obtain financial or other confidential information from people by placing phone calls, typically automated, that seem to be from a legitimate organization, usually a financial institution: an increase in vishing, facilitated by voIP, an Internet-based phone system.
- washed — Simple past tense and past participle of wash.