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6-letter words containing l, h, e

  • halseyWilliam Frederick ("Bull") 1882–1959, U.S. admiral.
  • halted — Simple past tense and past participle of halt.
  • halter — Archaic. lameness; a limp.
  • halved — Simple past tense and past participle of halve.
  • halver — A fisherman who places a net to catch fish in the retreating tide.
  • halves — plural of half.
  • hamble — (obsolete, transitive) To mutilate; hamstring; cut away.
  • hameln — a city in N central Germany, on the Weser River: scene of the legend of the Pied Piper of Hamelin.
  • hamlet — (italics) a tragedy (first printed 1603) by Shakespeare.
  • handel — George Frideric [free-der-ik,, -drik] /ˈfri dər ɪk,, -drɪk/ (Show IPA), (Georg Friedrich Händel) 1685–1759, German composer in England after 1712.
  • handle — a part of a thing made specifically to be grasped or held by the hand.
  • hansel — to give a handsel to.
  • hantle — a sizeable amount
  • haoles — Plural form of haole.
  • hareld — The long-tailed duck, or oldsquaw.
  • harlem — a section of New York City, in the NE part of Manhattan.
  • harleyRobert, 1st Earl of Oxford, 1661–1724, British statesman.
  • harmel — Dated form of harmal.
  • haslet — the heart, liver, etc., of a hog or other animal used for food.
  • hasselOdd [awd] /ɔd/ (Show IPA), 1897–1981, Norwegian chemist: Nobel Prize 1969.
  • hassle — a disorderly dispute.
  • hauled — to pull or draw with force; move by drawing; drag: They hauled the boat up onto the beach.
  • hauler — a person who hauls.
  • haveli — A mansion.
  • hayley — a female given name.
  • haysel — the season for making hay
  • hazels — Plural form of hazel.
  • headly — (archaic) Chief; principal; capital; (of sins) deadly.
  • healed — to make healthy, whole, or sound; restore to health; free from ailment.
  • healee — a person who is being healed
  • healer — a person or thing that heals.
  • healey — Denis (Winston), Baron. 1917–2015, British Labour politician; Chancellor of the Exchequer (1974–79); deputy leader of the Labour Party (1980–83)
  • health — the general condition of the body or mind with reference to soundness and vigor: good health; poor health.
  • hebbel — (Christian) Friedrich [kris-tee-ahn free-drikh] /ˈkrɪs tiˌɑn ˈfri drɪx/ (Show IPA), 1813–63, German lyric poet and playwright.
  • heckle — to harass (a public speaker, performer, etc.) with impertinent questions, gibes, or the like; badger.
  • heddle — one of the sets of vertical cords or wires in a loom, forming the principal part of the harness that guides the warp threads.
  • heeled — provided with a heel or heels.
  • heeler — a person who heels shoes.
  • heelys — a brand of training shoes with wheels fitted in the heel to allow them to be used like in-line skates
  • helenaJoseph, Jr ("Joe") born 1956, U.S. football player.
  • helene — a female given name, form of Helen.
  • heliac — pertaining to or occurring near the sun, especially applied to such risings and settings of a star as are most nearly coincident with those of the sun while yet visible.
  • heling — Present participle of hele.
  • helio- — indicating the sun
  • helion — (physics) The nucleus of a helium-3 atom.
  • helios — the ancient Greek god of the sun, represented as driving a chariot across the heavens; identified by the Romans with Sol.
  • helium — liquid helium existing as a superfluid below the lambda point of 2.186 K, having very low viscosity and very high thermal conductivity.
  • hellas — ancient Greek name of Greece.
  • hellen — (in Greek legend) a Thessalian king and eponymous ancestor of the Hellenes
  • hellerJoseph, 1923–99, U.S. novelist.
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