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6-letter words containing t, h, u

  • hugest — extraordinarily large in bulk, quantity, or extent: a huge ship; a huge portion of ice cream.
  • humate — (chemistry) A salt of humic acid.
  • humect — to moisten, to wet
  • humint — the gathering of political or military intelligence through secret agents.
  • humite — a mineral, transparent vitreous brown to orange in colour, found in the volcanic matter on Vesuvius
  • humpty — a low padded seat; pouffe
  • hunted — to chase or search for (game or other wild animals) for the purpose of catching or killing.
  • huntee — One who is hunted.
  • hunterJohn, 1728–93, Scottish surgeon, physiologist, and biologist.
  • hursts — Plural form of hurst.
  • hurted — (archaic, or, nonstandard) Simple past tense and past participle of hurt.
  • hurter — to cause bodily injury to; injure: He was badly hurt in the accident.
  • hurtle — to rush violently; move with great speed: The car hurtled down the highway.
  • hustle — to proceed or work rapidly or energetically: to hustle about putting a house in order.
  • hustonJohn, 1906–87, U.S. film director and writer.
  • hutong — A narrow lane or alleyway in a traditional residential area of a Chinese city, especially Beijing.
  • hutted — Simple past tense and past participle of hut.
  • hutter — Someone who lives in a hut.
  • huttonJames, 1726–97, Scottish geologist: formulated uniformitarianism.
  • hutzpa — unmitigated effrontery or impudence; gall.
  • ithunn — a goddess, keeper of the apples of youth and wife of Bragi; abducted by the giant Thjazi, from whom she was rescued.
  • judith — a devoutly religious woman of the ancient Jews who saved her town from conquest by entering the camp of the besieging Assyrian army and cutting off the head of its commander, Holofernes, while he slept.
  • jutish — a member of a continental Germanic tribe, probably from Jutland, that invaded Britain in the 5th century a.d. and settled in Kent.
  • khurta — a long-sleeved, hip-length shirt worn by men in India.
  • krutchJoseph Wood, 1893–1970, U.S. critic, biographer, naturalist, and teacher.
  • kutcha — crude, imperfect, or temporary.
  • laught — (obsolete) Simple past tense and past participle of laugh.
  • luchot — engraved tablets of stone
  • luther — Martin [mahr-tn;; German mahr-teen] /ˈmɑr tn;; German ˈmɑr tin/ (Show IPA), 1483–1546, German theologian and author: leader, in Germany, of the Protestant Reformation.
  • mahout — the keeper or driver of an elephant, especially in India and the East Indies.
  • mought — (obsolete, outside, US dialects) Alternative form of might.
  • mouthe — Obsolete spelling of mouth.
  • mouths — Plural form of mouth.
  • mouthy — garrulous, often in a bombastic manner.
  • mumath — (mathematics, tool)   A symbolic mathematics package for the IBM PC, written in MuSimp.
  • naught — nothing.
  • nautch — (in India) an exhibition of dancing by professional dancing girls.
  • nethouPic de [French peek duh] /French pik də/ (Show IPA) a mountain in NE Spain: highest peak of the Pyrenees. 11,165 feet (3400 meters).
  • nought — nothing.
  • nuthin — Eye dialect nothing.
  • oughta — (colloquial, or, dialectical) Ought to.
  • oughts — a cipher (0); zero.
  • outher — (obsolete) either.
  • outhit — to deal a blow or stroke to: Hit the nail with the hammer.
  • phuket — an island near the W coast of Thailand. 294 sq. mi. (761 sq. km).
  • prutah — a former aluminum coin of Israel, the thousandth part of a pound.
  • pushto — Pashto.
  • pushtu — Pashto.
  • putsch — a plotted revolt or attempt to overthrow a government, especially one that depends upon suddenness and speed.
  • quatch — a sound
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