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8-letter words that end in h

  • myriadth — constituting a very small part of a thing
  • naismithJames, 1861–1939, U.S. physical-education teacher and originator of basketball, born in Canada.
  • nannyish — Like a nanny; tending to coddle.
  • nargileh — Alternative form of narghile.
  • nazareth — a town in N Israel: the childhood home of Jesus.
  • nehemiah — a Hebrew leader of the 5th century b.c.
  • neomorph — (genetics) a gain of function mutation that causes novel gene function.
  • new math — a unified, sequential system of teaching arithmetic and mathematics in accord with set theory so as to reveal basic concepts: used in some U.S. schools, especially in the 1960s and 1970s.
  • new-rich — newly or suddenly wealthy.
  • newburgh — a city in SE New York, on the Hudson.
  • ninnyish — Silly; foolish.
  • nohowish — lacking distinctiveness
  • nonesuch — a person or thing without equal; paragon.
  • nonmatch — That which is not a match; a mismatch.
  • not much — very little
  • novelish — (esp of a name or a person) characteristic of a novel; having qualities like those of a character or scene in a novel; fanciful; romantic
  • nucflash — a report of highest precedence notifying the president, secretary of defense, or their deputies of an accidental or unauthorized nuclear-weapon launch or of a nuclear attack.
  • numbfish — an electric ray, so called from its power of numbing its prey by means of electric shocks.
  • nut dash — a dash equal in length to the width of an en quad; en dash.
  • nuthatch — any of numerous small, short-tailed, sharp-beaked birds of the family Sittidae that creep on trees and feed on small nuts and insects.
  • oanshagh — a foolish girl or woman
  • ochozath — Ahuzzath.
  • octopush — the game of underwater hockey, in which two teams attempt to push a weighted object along the floor of a swimming pool
  • odograph — a recording odometer.
  • off with — a command, often peremptory, or an exhortation to remove or cut off (something specified)
  • offereth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of offer.
  • oilcloth — a cotton fabric made waterproof by being treated with oil and pigment, for use as tablecloths, shelf coverings, and the like.
  • oistrakh — David [dey-vid] /ˈdeɪ vɪd/ (Show IPA), 1908–74, Russian violinist.
  • oligarch — one of the rulers in an oligarchy.
  • omniarch — A ruler of the world.
  • on earth — (often initial capital letter) the planet third in order from the sun, having an equatorial diameter of 7926 miles (12,755 km) and a polar diameter of 7900 miles (12,714 km), a mean distance from the sun of 92.9 million miles (149.6 million km), and a period of revolution of 365.26 days, and having one satellite.
  • on faith — through trust; without proof or evidence
  • on watch — If someone is on watch, they have the job of carefully looking and listening, often while other people are asleep and often as a military duty, so that they can warn them of danger or an attack.
  • opsimath — (rare) A person who learns late in life.Oxford English Dictionary, 3rd ed., 2004.
  • orangish — resembling or suggesting an orange, as in taste, appearance, or color: decorated with orangy-pink flowers.
  • outbitch — to bitch more than or better than
  • outblush — to blush more than or to exceed in rosy colour
  • outcatch — to catch more than
  • outcoach — to exceed in coaching
  • outflash — a brief, sudden burst of bright light: a flash of lightning.
  • outflush — a burst of emotion
  • outlaugh — (transitive) To ridicule or laugh someone out of a purpose, principle, etc.; laugh down; discourage or put out of countenance by laughing.
  • outmarch — to march faster or farther than.
  • outmatch — to be superior to; surpass; outdo: The home team seems to have been completely outmatched by the visitors.
  • outpitch — to exceed in pitching
  • outpunch — to punch better than
  • outreach — to reach beyond; exceed: The demand has outreached our supply.
  • outtough — to get the better of (a competitor) by showing more determination.
  • outwatch — to outdo or surpass in watching.
  • outweigh — to exceed in value, importance, influence, etc.: The advantages of the plan outweighed its defects.
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