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6-letter words containing s, h

  • nights — at or during the night regularly or frequently: He worked during the day and wrote nights.
  • ninths — Plural form of ninth.
  • noshed — Simple past tense and past participle of nosh.
  • nosher — Informal. a person who snacks, especially one who does so often or continuously.
  • noshes — to snack or eat between meals.
  • nymphs — one of a numerous class of lesser deities of mythology, conceived of as beautiful maidens inhabiting the sea, rivers, woods, trees, mountains, meadows, etc., and frequently mentioned as attending a superior deity.
  • oafish — a clumsy, stupid person; lout.
  • obeahs — Plural form of obeah.
  • oddish — rather odd; queer.
  • odisha — a state in E India. 60,136 sq. mi. (155,752 sq. km). Capital: Bhubaneshwar.
  • of his — belonging to or associated with him
  • offish — aloof; unapproachable; standoffish.
  • ogrish — a monster in fairy tales and popular legend, usually represented as a hideous giant who feeds on human flesh.
  • oldish — somewhat old: an oldish man.
  • onrush — a strong forward rush, flow, etc.
  • ophulsMax [maks;; German mahks] /mæks;; German mɑks/ (Show IPA), (Max Oppenheimer) 1902–57, German film director, in Germany, France, and the U.S.
  • orchis — any orchid.
  • orcish — (fantasy) Of or relating to orcs (monstrous humanoid creatures).
  • orisha — A divine entity that possesses the supernatural capability of reflecting some of the manifestations of Ol\u00f3d\u00f9mar\u00e8.
  • orthos — Plural form of ortho.
  • oshawa — a city in SE Ontario, in S Canada, NE of Toronto, on Lake Ontario.
  • others — additional or further: he and one other person.
  • ouches — a clasp, buckle, or brooch, especially one worn for ornament.
  • oughts — a cipher (0); zero.
  • owelsh — Old Welsh
  • owlish — resembling or characteristic of an owl: His thick glasses give him an owlish appearance.
  • palish — somewhat pale.
  • paphos — an ancient city in SW Cyprus.
  • papish — a Roman Catholic
  • parish — an ecclesiastical district having its own church and member of the clergy.
  • pashka — a rich Russian dessert made of cottage cheese, cream, almonds, currants, etc, set in a special wooden mould and traditionally eaten at Easter
  • pashto — an Indo-European, Iranian language that is the official language of Afghanistan and the chief vernacular of the eastern part of the nation.
  • paskha — an Easter dessert of pot cheese mixed with sugar, butter, cream, raisins, nuts, etc., and pressed into a pyramidal mold: usually served with kulich.
  • pathos — the quality or power in an actual life experience or in literature, music, speech, or other forms of expression, of evoking a feeling of pity, or of sympathetic and kindly sorrow or compassion.
  • penhsi — Benxi.
  • perish — to die or be destroyed through violence, privation, etc.: to perish in an earthquake.
  • pesach — Passover (def 1).
  • pharos — a small peninsula in N Egypt, near Alexandria: site of ancient lighthouse built by Ptolemy.
  • phased — any of the major appearances or aspects in which a thing of varying modes or conditions manifests itself to the eye or mind.
  • phasic — any of the major appearances or aspects in which a thing of varying modes or conditions manifests itself to the eye or mind.
  • phasis — a manner, stage, or aspect of being; phase.
  • phasor — a vector that represents a sinusoidally varying quantity, as a current or voltage, by means of a line rotating about a point in a plane, the magnitude of the quantity being proportional to the length of the line and the phase of the quantity being equal to the angle between the line and a reference line.
  • pheese — a state of edgy or uneasy agitation
  • phelps — William Lyon [lahy-uh n] /ˈlaɪ ən/ (Show IPA), 1865–1943, U.S. educator and literary critic.
  • phobos — Also, Phobus [foh-buh s] /ˈfoʊ bəs/ (Show IPA). Classical Mythology. a son and attendant of Ares and the personification of a fear held to possess armies and cause their defeat.
  • phobus — Also, Phobus [foh-buh s] /ˈfoʊ bəs/ (Show IPA). Classical Mythology. a son and attendant of Ares and the personification of a fear held to possess armies and cause their defeat.
  • phocis — an ancient district in central Greece, N of the Gulf of Corinth: site of Delphic oracle.
  • phocus — An object-oriented Prolog-like language.
  • pholas — a type of bivalve mollusc that is a member of the genus Pholas and family Pholadidae
  • pholus — a large astronomical object, some 2000 km in diameter, discovered in 1991. Its elliptical orbit around the earth, between the orbits of Neptune and Saturn, has a period of 93 years. It has been classified as an asteroid although it lies outside the main asteroid belt
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