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6-letter words containing he

  • douche — a jet or current of water, sometimes with a dissolved medicating or cleansing agent, applied to a body part, organ, or cavity for medicinal or hygienic purposes.
  • eacher — every one of two or more considered individually or one by one: each stone in a building; a hallway with a door at each end.
  • eatche — a wood-working tool that has a blade that bends towards the handle and is used for paring or shaving
  • eather — Obsolete spelling of either.
  • either — Used before the first of two (or occasionally more ) alternatives that are being specified (the other being introduced by “ or ”).
  • elchee — an ambassador
  • eliche — pasta in the form of spirals
  • eothen — from the East
  • ephebe — (in ancient Greece) a young man of 18-20 years undergoing military training.
  • epoche — Moment of theoretical suspension of all action.
  • escher — M(aurits) C(ornelis)1898-1972; Du. graphic artist
  • eschew — Deliberately avoid using; abstain from.
  • esther — a beautiful Jewish woman who became queen of Persia and saved her people from massacre
  • etched — Cut or dug into the surface as by etching.
  • etcher — A person who etches.
  • etches — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of etch.
  • ethene — (organic compound) The official IUPAC name for the organic chemical compound ethylene. The simplest alkene, a colorless gaseous (at room temperature and pressure) hydrocarbon with the chemical formula C2H4.
  • ethers — Plural form of ether.
  • fashed — Simple past tense and past participle of fash.
  • father — a male parent.
  • fether — Archaic form of feather.
  • fished — Simple past tense and past participle of fish.
  • fisherAndrew, 1862–1928, Australian statesman, born in Scotland: prime minister 1908–09, 1910–13, 1914–15.
  • fishes — any of various cold-blooded, aquatic vertebrates, having gills, commonly fins, and typically an elongated body covered with scales.
  • fitche — pointed
  • flathe — Flan.
  • fleche — Architecture. a steeple or spire, especially one in the Gothic style, emerging from the ridge of a roof.
  • forthe — Obsolete spelling of forth.
  • fother — (obsolete) a wagonload; a load of any sort.
  • gashed — Make a gash in; cut deeply.
  • gasher — dreary or gloomy in appearance.
  • gashes — a long, deep wound or cut; slash.
  • gather — to bring together into one group, collection, or place: to gather firewood; to gather the troops.
  • gauche — lacking social grace, sensitivity, or acuteness; awkward; crude; tactless: Their exquisite manners always make me feel gauche.
  • gether — (obsolete, or, regional) Alternative form of gather.
  • gheber — Gabar.
  • gherao — (India) A protest in which a group of people surrounds a politician, building, etc. until demands are met.
  • ghetti — Irregular plural form of ghetto.
  • ghetto — a section of a city, especially a thickly populated slum area, inhabited predominantly by members of an ethnic or other minority group, often as a result of social or economic restrictions, pressures, or hardships.
  • goethe — Johann Wolfgang von [yoh-hahn vawlf-gahng fuh n] /ˈyoʊ hɑn ˈvɔlf gɑŋ fən/ (Show IPA), 1749–1832, German poet, dramatist, novelist, and philosopher.
  • gopher — an employee whose chief duty is running errands.
  • gorhen — a female red grouse
  • goshen — a pastoral region in Lower Egypt, occupied by the Israelites before the Exodus. Gen. 45:10.
  • guache — Alternative spelling of gouache.
  • gushed — to flow out or issue suddenly, copiously, or forcibly, as a fluid from confinement: Water gushed from the broken pipe.
  • gusher — a flowing oil well, usually of large capacity.
  • gushes — Plural form of gush.
  • hashed — Simple past tense and past participle of hash.
  • hashem — a periphrastic way of referring to God in contexts other than prayer, scriptural reading, etc because the name itself is considered too holy for such use
  • hasher — a waiter or waitress, especially in a hash house.
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