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6-letter words containing y, a, h

  • gashly — hideous; ghastly
  • gayish — Somewhat gay; gay to a certain extent.
  • gharry — a horse-drawn cab or carriage used in India and Egypt.
  • gunyah — an aboriginal hut or shelter.
  • hackly — rough or jagged, as if hacked: Some minerals break with a hackly fracture.
  • hadley — Henry Kimball [kim-buh l] /ˈkɪm bəl/ (Show IPA), 1871–1937, U.S. composer and conductor.
  • halevy — Fromental [fraw-mahn-tal] /frɔ mɑ̃ˈtal/ (Show IPA), (Jacques François Fromental Élie Lévy) 1790–1862, French composer, especially of operas.
  • halleyEdmund or Edmond, 1656–1742, English astronomer.
  • halseyWilliam Frederick ("Bull") 1882–1959, U.S. admiral.
  • hamlyn — Baron Paul. 1926–2001, British businessman and publisher
  • han yu — (Han Wen-kung; Han Wengong) a.d. 768–824, Chinese writer, poet, and philosopher.
  • handly — Of or pertaining to the hand; manual.
  • handsy — (informal) prone to touching other people with one's hands, especially inappropriately.
  • hangry — feeling irritable or irrationally angry as a result of being hungry.
  • hardly — only just; almost not; barely: We had hardly reached the lake when it started raining. hardly any; hardly ever.
  • harleyRobert, 1st Earl of Oxford, 1661–1724, British statesman.
  • harrys — a male given name, form of Harold or Henry.
  • harveyWilliam, 1578–1657, English physician: discoverer of the circulation of the blood.
  • haulmy — having haulms
  • hauyne — a blue feldspathoid mineral found in igneous rock
  • hawkey — Obsolete form of hockey.
  • haybox — A box stuffed with hay in which heated food was left to continue cooking.
  • hayday — Misspelling of heyday.
  • haydenMelissa (Mildred Herman) 1923–2006, Canadian ballerina in the U.S.
  • haydon — Benjamin (Robert). 1786–1846, British historical painter and art critic, best known for his Autobiography and Journals (1853)
  • haying — grass, clover, alfalfa, etc., cut and dried for use as forage.
  • hayley — a female given name.
  • haymow — hay stored in a barn.
  • haynes — Elwood [el-woo d] /ˈɛlˌwʊd/ (Show IPA), 1857–1925, U.S. inventor.
  • haysel — the season for making hay
  • hazily — characterized by the presence of haze; misty: hazy weather.
  • headly — (archaic) Chief; principal; capital; (of sins) deadly.
  • healey — Denis (Winston), Baron. 1917–2015, British Labour politician; Chancellor of the Exchequer (1974–79); deputy leader of the Labour Party (1980–83)
  • heaney — Seamus [shey-muh s] /ˈʃeɪ məs/ (Show IPA), 1939–2013, Irish poet: Nobel Prize 1995.
  • hearsy — resembling a hearse
  • hearty — warm-hearted; affectionate; cordial; jovial: a hearty welcome.
  • heathy — heathery.
  • heyday — the stage or period of greatest vigor, strength, success, etc.; prime: the heyday of the vaudeville stars.
  • hilary — Hilarius, Saint.
  • hobday — to alleviate (a breathing problem in certain horses) by the surgical operation of removing soft tissue ventricles to pull back the vocal fold
  • hooray — joy
  • hooyah — (US, military) Official battle yell of the US Navy.
  • horary — pertaining to an hour; indicating the hours: the horary circle.
  • hryvna — The basic monetary unit of Ukraine, equal to 100 kopiykas.
  • hurray — to shout “hurrah.”.
  • hyades — Astronomy. a group of stars comprising a moving cluster in the constellation Taurus, supposed by the ancients to indicate the approach of rain when they rose with the sun.
  • hyaena — a doglike carnivore of the family Hyaenidae, of Africa, southwestern Asia, and south central Asia, having a coarse coat, a sloping back, and large teeth and feeding chiefly on carrion, often in packs.
  • hyalin — Also, hyalin, H04/H0454500 hahy-uh-lin, ˈhaɪ ə lɪn. Biochemistry. a horny substance found in hydatid cysts, closely resembling chitin. a structureless, transparent substance found in cartilage, the eye, etc., resulting from the pathological degeneration of tissue.
  • hyalo- — of, relating to, or resembling glass
  • hydras — Plural form of hydra.
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