5-letter words that end in h
- forth — onward or outward in place or space; forward: to come forth; go forth.
- fough — Obsolete spelling of faugh.
- fouth — an abundance or fullness
- fresh — newly made or obtained: fresh footprints.
- frith — firth.
- frosh — a college or high-school freshman.
- froth — an aggregation of bubbles, as on an agitated liquid or at the mouth of a hard-driven horse; foam; spume.
- frush — (obsolete, transitive) To break up, smash.
- fulah — Fulani (def 1).
- furth — a city in S Germany, near Nuremberg.
- galah — an Australian cockatoo, Kakatoe roseicapilla, having rose-colored underparts.
- ganch — the spiked or hooked apparatus used to impale a criminal
- garth — a male given name.
- gatch — A form of plaster of Paris formerly used in Persia.
- gerah — an ancient Hebrew weight and coin, equal to 1/20 (0.05) of a shekel.
- girsh — qirsh.
- girth — the measure around anything; circumference.
- gitch — (Saskatchewan) Women's or men's underwear.
- glish — Glish is an interpretive language for building loosely-coupled distributed systems from modular, event-oriented programs. Written by Vern Paxson <[email protected]>. These programs are written in conventional languages such as C, C++, or Fortran. Glish scripts can create local and remote processes and control their communication. Glish also provides a full, array-oriented programming language (similar to S) for manipulating binary data sent between the processes. In general Glish uses a centralised communication model where interprocess communication passes through the Glish interpreter, allowing dynamic modification and rerouting of data values, but Glish also supports point-to-point links between processes when necessary for high performance. Version 2.4.1 includes an interpreter, C++ class library and user manual. It requires C++ and there are ports to SunOS, Ultrix, an HP/UX (rusty).
- glyph — a pictograph or hieroglyph.
- gnash — to grind or strike (the teeth) together, especially in rage or pain.
- goeth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of go.
- gooch — George Peabody, 1873–1968, English historian.
- gotch — (Saskatchewan, and, Manitoba, slang) Men's underwear.
- graph — a diagram representing a system of connections or interrelations among two or more things by a number of distinctive dots, lines, bars, etc.
- grith — protection or asylum for a limited period of time, as under church or crown.
- grush — healthy; thriving.
- gulch — a deep, narrow ravine, especially one marking the course of a stream or torrent.
- gunch — /guhnch/
(TMRC) To push, prod, or poke at a device that has almost (but not quite) produced the desired result. Implies a threat to mung. - gursh — qirsh.
- haith — a curse or a profanity
- hanch — Alternative form of hance.
- harsh — ungentle and unpleasant in action or effect: harsh treatment; harsh manners.
- harth — Obsolete spelling of hearth.
- hatch — to mark with lines, especially closely set parallel lines, as for shading in drawing or engraving.
- hauch — (Scotland) A cough or gasp.
- haugh — a stretch of alluvial land forming part of a river valley; bottom land.
- heath — Sir Edward (Richard George) 1916–2005, British statesman: prime minister 1970–74.
- heigh — Expressing encouragement or inquiry.
- helth — Obsolete form of health.
- hench — Philip Showalter [shoh-awl-ter] /ˈʃoʊ ɔl tər/ (Show IPA), 1896–1965, U.S. physician: Nobel Prize in Medicine 1950.
- heugh — (Scotland) A steep crag or cliff, especially one with overhanging sides.
- hewgh — a sound made to imitate the flight of an arrow
- hilch — to limp or hobble
- hitch — to fasten or tie, especially temporarily, by means of a hook, rope, strap, etc.; tether: Steve hitched the horse to one of the posts.
- hooch — Pieter de [pee-ter duh;; Dutch pee-tuh r duh] /ˈpi tər də;; Dutch ˈpi tər də/ (Show IPA), 1629?–88? Dutch painter.
- hoogh — Pieter de [Dutch pee-ter duh] /Dutch ˈpi tər də/ (Show IPA), Hooch, Pieter de.
- hoosh — Whoosh.
- hopeh — Older Spelling. Hebei.
- horah — Alternative form of hora.