7-letter words containing u, t, h
- hangout — a place where a person frequently visits, especially for socializing or recreation.
- hateful — arousing hate or deserving to be hated: the hateful oppression of dictators.
- hatfuls — Plural form of hatful.
- haughty — disdainfully proud; snobbish; scornfully arrogant; supercilious: haughty aristocrats; a haughty salesclerk.
- haunted — inhabited or frequented by ghosts: a haunted castle.
- haunter — to visit habitually or appear to frequently as a spirit or ghost: to haunt a house; to haunt a person.
- hautboy — oboe1 (def 1).
- hautest — high-class or high-toned; fancy: an haute restaurant that attracts a monied crowd.
- hauteur — haughty manner or spirit; arrogance.
- hautpas — A raised part of the floor of a large room; a dais or platform for a raised table or throne.
- heat up — the state of a body perceived as having or generating a relatively high degree of warmth.
- herault — a department in S France. 2403 sq. mi. (6225 sq. km). Capital: Montpellier.
- hereout — (obsolete) Out of this.
- hideout — a safe place for hiding, especially from the law.
- hinault — Bernard, born 1954, French cyclist with five victories (1978–79, 1981–82, and 1985) in the Tour de France.
- hindgut — Zoology. the last portion of the vertebrate alimentary canal, between the cecum and the anus, involved mainly with water resorption and with the storage and elimination of food residue; the large intestine. the posterior colon of arthropods, composed of ectodermal, chitin-lined tissue.
- hirsute — hairy; shaggy.
- hit out — to deal a blow or stroke to: Hit the nail with the hammer.
- hit-run — hit-and-run (defs 1, 2, 4).
- holdout — an act or instance of holding out.
- holibut — halibut.
- hot tub — a wooden tub, usually large enough to accommodate several persons, that is filled with hot aerated water and often equipped with a thermostat and whirlpool: used for recreation or physical therapy and often placed out of doors, as on a porch.
- hotspur — Sir Henry ("Hotspur") 1364–1403, English military and rebel leader.
- houston — Sam(uel) 1793–1863, U.S. soldier and political leader: president of the Republic of Texas 1836–38 and 1841–44.
- houting — a European whitefish, Coregonus oxyrhynchus, that lives in salt water but spawns in freshwater lakes: a valued food fish
- huastec — a member of an Indian people of Mexico.
- huhehot — Hohhot.
- huitain — a French verse form of eight lines or sets of lines of 8 or 10 syllables rhyming ababbcbc or abbaacac
- hun-tun — a mythical Chinese being personifying chaos.
- hunt up — to chase or search for (game or other wild animals) for the purpose of catching or killing.
- hunters — Plural form of hunter.
- hunting — an act or practice of hunting game or other wild animals.
- hurston — Zora Neale [neel] /nil/ (Show IPA), 1891?–1960, U.S. author and folklorist.
- hurteth — Archaic third-person singular form of hurt.
- hurtful — causing hurt or injury; injurious; harmful.
- hurting — to cause bodily injury to; injure: He was badly hurt in the accident.
- hurtled — to rush violently; move with great speed: The car hurtled down the highway.
- hurtles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of hurtle.
- hussite — a member of the religious reformist and nationalistic movement initiated by John Huss in Bohemia in the late 14th century.
- husting — A platform where candidates in an election give speeches.
- hustled — Simple past tense and past participle of hustle.
- hustler — an enterprising person determined to succeed; go-getter.
- hustles — Plural form of hustle.
- hutched — Kept in a hutch.
- hutches — Plural form of hutch.
- hutchie — a groundsheet draped over an upright stick, used as a temporary shelter
- hutment — an encampment of huts.
- hutongs — Plural form of hutong.
- hutting — a small or humble dwelling of simple construction, especially one made of natural materials, as of logs or grass.
- hutzpah — unmitigated effrontery or impudence; gall.