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8-letter words containing and

  • highland — a region in N Scotland, including a number of the Inner Hebrides. 9710 sq. mi. (25,148 sq. km).
  • hoaglandEdward, born 1932, U.S. novelist and essayist.
  • hollande — François (frɑ̃swa). born 1954, French socialist politician, president of France (2012–17)
  • hollandsJohn Philip, 1840–1914, Irish inventor in the U.S.
  • homeland — one's native land.
  • honorand — the recipient of an honor, especially an honorary university degree.
  • husbands — Plural form of husband.
  • inkstand — a small stand, usually on a desk, for holding ink, pens, etc.
  • inlander — a person living inland.
  • isenland — (in the Nibelungenlied) the country of Brunhild, usually identified with Iceland.
  • islanded — Simple past tense and past participle of island.
  • islander — a native or inhabitant of an island.
  • jimdandy — (dated, slang) A fine or excellent person; a crackerjack.
  • jug band — a small group of performers who play chiefly blues or folk music on makeshift or very simple instruments, as washboards, harmonicas, kazoos, and empty jugs, the latter being played by blowing across the openings.
  • kandahar — a city in S Afghanistan.
  • katmandu — a city in and the capital of Nepal, in the central part.
  • kirklandJack, 1901–69, U.S. writer and playwright.
  • lackland — a person who has no land or territory
  • lakeland — a city in central Florida.
  • land art — earth art.
  • land tax — law: includes all land sb owns
  • landable — Capable of being landed.
  • landbank — An area of land held in reserve by a house-building firm.
  • landfall — an approach to or sighting of land: The ship will make its landfall at noon tomorrow.
  • landfast — attached to or grounded on shore or land: landfast ice.
  • landfill — a low area of land that is built up from deposits of solid refuse in layers covered by soil.
  • landform — a specific geomorphic feature on the surface of the earth, ranging from large-scale features such as plains, plateaus, and mountains to minor features such as hills, valleys, and alluvial fans.
  • landgrab — the seizing of land by a nation, state, or organization, especially illegally, underhandedly, or unfairly.
  • landings — Plural form of landing.
  • landlady — a woman who owns and leases an apartment, house, land, etc., to others.
  • landless — without landed property; not owning land: a landless noble.
  • landline — a circuit of wire or cable connecting two ground locations.
  • landlock — (transitive) To enclose or nearly enclose (a harbour, vessel, etc.) with land.
  • landlord — a person or organization that owns and leases apartments to others.
  • landmark — a prominent or conspicuous object on land that serves as a guide, especially to ships at sea or to travelers on a road; a distinguishing landscape feature marking a site or location: The post office served as a landmark for locating the street to turn down.
  • landmass — a part of the continental crust above sea level having a distinct identity, as a continent or large island.
  • landmine — an explosive charge concealed just under the surface of the ground or of a roadway, designed to be detonated by pressure, proximity of a vehicle or person, etc.
  • landrace — one of several widely distributed strains of large, white, lop-eared swine of northern European origin.
  • landrail — The corncrake, Crex crex.
  • landseerSir Edwin Henry, 1802–73, English painter, especially of animals.
  • landshut — a city in SE Germany, in Bavaria: Trausnitz castle (13th century); manufacturing centre for machinery and chemicals. Pop: 60 282 (2003 est)
  • landside — the part of a plow consisting of a sidepiece opposite the moldboard, for guiding the plow and resisting the side pressure caused by the turning of the furrow.
  • landskip — landscape.
  • landslip — the downward falling or sliding of a mass of soil, detritus, or rock on or from a steep slope.
  • landsmal — Nynorsk.
  • landsman — Also, landman. a person who lives or works on land.
  • landward — Also, landwards. toward the land or interior.
  • landwash — the foreshore, especially that part between high and low tidemarks.
  • landwehr — (in Germany, Austria, etc.) the part of the organized military forces of a nation that has completed a certain amount of compulsory training, and whose continuous service is required only in time of war.
  • langlandWilliam, 1332?–c1400, English poet.
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