0%

9-letter words containing u, m

  • hamamatsu — a city on S central Honshu, in central Japan.
  • hamburger — a sandwich consisting of a cooked patty of ground or chopped beef, usually in a roll or bun, variously garnished.
  • hammurabi — 18th century b.c. or earlier, king of Babylonia.
  • hamstrung — (in humans and other primates) any of the tendons that bound the ham of the knee.
  • harmfully — In a harmful manner.
  • harmonium — an organlike keyboard instrument with small metal reeds and a pair of bellows operated by the player's feet.
  • harrumphs — Plural form of harrumph.
  • harumphed — Simple past tense and past participle of harumph.
  • hauptmann — Gerhart [ger-hahrt] /ˈgɛr hɑrt/ (Show IPA), 1862–1946, German dramatist, novelist, and poet: Nobel Prize 1912.
  • haussmann — Georges Eugène [zhawrzh œ-zhen] /ʒɔrʒ œˈʒɛn/ (Show IPA), Baron, 1809–91, French administrator who improved the landscaping, street designs, and utilities systems of Paris.
  • head smut — a disease of cereals and other grasses, characterized by a dark-brown, powdery mass of spores replacing the affected seed heads, caused by any of several smut fungi of the genera Sorosporium, Sphacelotheca, and Ustilago.
  • heat pump — a device that uses a compressible refrigerant to transfer heat from one body, as the ground, air, or water, to another body, as a building, with the process being reversible.
  • heavy mud — a dense substance made of a mixture of the mineral barite and water that is thickened with polymers
  • helium ii — liquid helium existing as a superfluid below the lambda point of 2.186 K, having very low viscosity and very high thermal conductivity.
  • help menu — the place on a computer where you can get help and advice
  • hematuria — the presence of blood in the urine.
  • herbarium — a collection of dried plants systematically arranged.
  • high jump — sport: jumping over a high bar
  • high-jump — to participate in the high jump; compete as a high jumper.
  • hilversum — a city in central Netherlands.
  • hirsutism — excessive hairiness, especially in women.
  • home rule — self-government in local matters by a city, province, state, colony, or the like.
  • home unit — a self-contained residence which is part of a series of similar residences
  • homebound — confined to one's home, especially because of illness.
  • homebuilt — Constructed at home, rather than being obtained from a manufacturer etc.
  • homebuyer — a person who buys or expects to buy a house.
  • homecourt — (basketball) The home court of a basketball team.
  • homologue — something homologous.
  • homunculi — an artificially made dwarf, supposedly produced in a flask by an alchemist.
  • hordeolum — sty2 .
  • hospitium — a hospice.
  • housemaid — a female servant employed in general domestic work in a home, especially to do housework.
  • housemate — a person with whom one shares a house or other residence.
  • houseroom — lodging or accommodation in a house.
  • houyhnhnm — (in Swift's Gulliver's Travels) one of a race of horses endowed with reason, who rule the Yahoos, a race of degraded, brutish creatures having human form.
  • humanhood — the state or character of being human
  • humanised — Simple past tense and past participle of humanise.
  • humanists — Plural form of humanist.
  • humanized — to make humane, kind, or gentle.
  • humanizer — to make humane, kind, or gentle.
  • humanizes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of humanize.
  • humankind — human beings collectively; the human race.
  • humanlike — of, pertaining to, characteristic of, or having the nature of people: human frailty.
  • humanness — of, pertaining to, characteristic of, or having the nature of people: human frailty.
  • humanoids — Plural form of humanoid.
  • humbert i — (Umberto I) 1844–1900, king of Italy 1878–1900.
  • humblebee — bumblebee.
  • humblesse — humbleness, humility, or abasement
  • humbucker — (music) A pickup, on an electric guitar, that has a pair of coils of reverse polarity connected in series - to
  • humbugged — Simple past tense and past participle of humbug.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?