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8-letter words containing har

  • harpists — Plural form of harpist.
  • harpoons — Plural form of harpoon.
  • harridan — a scolding, vicious woman; hag; shrew.
  • harriers — Plural form of harrier.
  • harrimanEdward Henry, 1848–1909, U.S. financier and railroad magnate.
  • harrisonBenjamin, 1726?–91, American political leader (father of William Henry Harrison).
  • harrowed — an agricultural implement with spikelike teeth or upright disks, drawn chiefly over plowed land to level it, break up clods, root up weeds, etc.
  • harrower — an agricultural implement with spikelike teeth or upright disks, drawn chiefly over plowed land to level it, break up clods, root up weeds, etc.
  • harrumph — to clear the throat audibly in a self-important manner: The professor harrumphed good-naturedly.
  • harrying — to harass, annoy, or prove a nuisance to by or as if by repeated attacks; worry: He was harried by constant doubts.
  • harshest — ungentle and unpleasant in action or effect: harsh treatment; harsh manners.
  • harshing — Present participle of harsh.
  • hartford — a state in the NE United States. 5009 sq. mi. (12,975 sq. km). Capital: Hartford. Abbreviation: Conn., Ct., CT (for use with zip code).
  • hartline — Haldan Keffer [hawl-duh n kef-er] /ˈhɔl dən ˈkɛf ər/ (Show IPA), 1903–83, U.S. physiologist: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1967.
  • hartmann — (Karl Robert) Eduard von [kahrl roh-buh rt ey-doo-ahrt fuh n] /kɑrl ˈroʊ bərt ˈeɪ duˌɑrt fən/ (Show IPA), 1842–1906, German philosopher.
  • hartnell — Sir Norman. 1901–79, English couturier
  • harunobu — Suzuki [soo-zoo-kee] /sʊˈzu ki/ (Show IPA), 1720?–70, Japanese painter and printmaker.
  • haruspex — (in ancient Rome) one of a class of minor priests who practiced divination, especially from the entrails of animals killed in sacrifice.
  • harvests — Plural form of harvest.
  • ichihara — a city in central Honshu, Japan, on Tokyo Bay.
  • issachar — a son of Jacob and Leah. Gen. 30:18.
  • jaw harp — jew's-harp
  • jobshare — an arrangement in which two or more people divide the duties and payment for one position between them, working at different times
  • kalahari — a desert region in SW Africa, largely in Botswana. 100,000 sq. mi. (259,000 sq. km).
  • kandahar — a city in S Afghanistan.
  • khartoum — a region in N Africa, S of the Sahara and Libyan deserts, extending from the Atlantic to the Red Sea.
  • kitharas — a musical instrument of ancient Greece consisting of an elaborate wooden soundbox having two arms connected by a yoke to which the upper ends of the strings are attached.
  • kootchar — any of several small, stingless Australian honeybees of the genus Trigona.
  • lethargy — the quality or state of being drowsy and dull, listless and unenergetic, or indifferent and lazy; apathetic or sluggish inactivity.
  • litharge — a yellowish or reddish, odorless, heavy, earthy, water-insoluble, poisonous solid, PbO, used chiefly in the manufacture of storage batteries, pottery, lead glass, paints, enamels, and inks.
  • lockhartJohn Gibson, 1794–1854, Scottish biographer and novelist.
  • lothario — (sometimes lowercase) a man who obsessively seduces and deceives women.
  • maharaja — (formerly) a ruling prince in India, especially of one of the major states.
  • maharani — (formerly) the wife of a maharajah.
  • moharram — the first month of the Muslim calendar.
  • mouchard — a police informer or spy
  • muharram — Moharram.
  • nenuphar — A water lily, especially the European white water lily (Nymphaea alba) or the yellow water lily (Nuphar lutea).
  • nonhardy — characterized by fragility or incapable of surviving under difficult conditions
  • orchards — Plural form of orchard.
  • outcharm — to exceed in charming
  • overhard — too hard
  • petchary — a grey kingbird, Tyrannus dominicensis
  • pharaohs — a title of an ancient Egyptian king.
  • pharisee — a member of a Jewish sect that flourished during the 1st century b.c. and 1st century a.d. and that differed from the Sadducees chiefly in its strict observance of religious ceremonies and practices, adherence to oral laws and traditions, and belief in an afterlife and the coming of a Messiah.
  • pharmacy — Also called pharmaceutics. the art and science of preparing and dispensing drugs and medicines.
  • pharming — the process of producing medically useful products from genetically modified plants and animals.
  • pilchard — a small, southern European, marine fish, Sardina pilchardus, related to the herring but smaller and rounder.
  • potiphar — the Egyptian officer whose wife tried to seduce Joseph. Gen. 39:1–20.
  • prichard — a city in S Alabama.
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