(onomatopoeia) Expressing annoyance, dismay, embarrassment or frustration.
bahr
bhar
char
char
noun
(Britain) Alternative form of cha (tea)
(computing, programming) A character (text element such as a letter or symbol).
(obsolete) A time; a turn or occasion.
(obsolete) A turn of work; a labour or item of business.
A charlady, a woman employed to do housework; cleaning lady.
A charred substance.
An odd job, a chore or piece of housework.
One of the several species of fishes of the genus Salvelinus.
verb
(ergative) To burn something to charcoal.
(obsolete) To perform; to do; to finish.
(obsolete) To turn, especially away or aside.
To burn slightly or superficially so as to affect colour.
To work or hew (stone, etc.)
To work, especially to do housework; to work by the day, without being a regularly hired servant.
dhar
fahr
haar
haar
noun
(especially Northern England, Scotland) Thick, cold, wet fog along the northeastern coast of Northern England and Scotland.
the third month of the Punjabi calendar.
hair
hair
noun
(botany, countable) A cellular outgrowth of the epidermis, consisting of one or of several cells, whether pointed, hooked, knobbed, or stellated.
(countable) A pigmented filament of keratin which grows from a follicle on the skin of humans and other mammals.
(countable) Any slender, flexible outgrowth, filament, or fiber growing or projecting from the surface of an object or organism.
(countable) Any very small distance, or degree; a hairbreadth.
(countable, engineering, firearms) A locking spring or other safety device in the lock of a rifle, etc., capable of being released by a slight pressure on a hair-trigger.
(obsolete) Haircloth; a hair shirt.
(slang, uncountable) Complexity; difficulty; the quality of being hairy.
(uncountable) The collection or mass of such growths growing from the skin of humans and animals, and forming a covering for a part of the head or for any part or the whole body.
(zoology, countable) A slender outgrowth from the chitinous cuticle of insects, spiders, crustaceans, and other invertebrates. Such hairs are totally unlike those of vertebrates in structure, composition, and mode of growth.
verb
(intransitive) To grow hair (where there was a bald spot).
(transitive) To cause to have or bear hair; to provide with hair
(transitive) To remove the hair from.
To string the bow for a violin.
hara
harb
hard
hard
adj
(Slavic phonology) Velarized or plain, rather than palatalized.
(bodybuilding) Having muscles that are tightened as a result of intense, regular exercise.
(dated) Difficult to resist or control; powerful.
(finance) Of a market: having more demand than supply; being a seller's market.
(military) Hardened; having unusually strong defences.
(of a normally nonalcoholic drink) Containing alcohol.
(of a road intersection) Having a comparatively larger or a ninety-degree angle.
(of drink or drugs) Strong.
(of pornography) hardcore
(of water) High in dissolved chemical salts, especially those of calcium.
(photography, of light) Made up of parallel rays, producing clearly defined shadows.
(physics, of a ferromagnetic material) Having the capability of being a permanent magnet by being a material with high magnetic coercivity (compare soft).
(physics, of electromagnetic radiation) Having a high energy (high frequency; short wavelength).
(politics) Far, extreme.
(slang) Tough and muscular.
(slang, vulgar, of a male) Sexually aroused; having an erect penis.
Demanding a lot of effort to endure.
Difficult or requiring a lot of effort to do, understand, experience, or deal with.
Having disagreeable and abrupt contrasts in colour or shading.
In a physical form, not digital.
Of silk: not having had the natural gum boiled off.
Plosive.
Resistant to pressure.
Rigid in the drawing or distribution of the figures; formal; lacking grace of composition.
Severe, harsh, unfriendly, brutal.
Unquestionable, unequivocal.
Unvoiced.
Using a manual or physical process, not by means of a software command.
adv
(manner) Compactly.
(manner) With difficulty.
(manner) With much force or effort.
(now archaic) Near, close.
(obsolete) So as to raise difficulties.
noun
(countable, motorsports) A tyre whose compound is softer than superhards, and harder than mediums.
(countable, nautical) A firm or paved beach or slope convenient for hauling vessels out of the water.
Any of several plant-eating animals of the family Leporidae, especially of the genus Lepus, similar to a rabbit, but larger and with longer ears.
The player in a paperchase, or hare and hounds game, who leaves a trail of paper to be followed.
verb
(intransitive) To move swiftly.
(obsolete) To excite; to tease, or worry; to harry.
hark
hark
noun
(Scots) A whisper
verb
(archaic, often imperative) To listen attentively.
harl
harl
noun
(Scotland) The act of dragging.
A barb, or barbs, of a fine large feather, as of a peacock or ostrich, used in dressing artificial flies.
A fibre, especially a fibre of hemp or flax, or an individual fibre of a feather.
A small quantity; a scraping of anything.
verb
(intransitive, Scotland) To drag oneself along.
(transitive) To surface a building using a slurry of pebbles or stone chips which is then cured using a lime render.
(transitive, Scotland) To drag along the ground.
To troll for fish.
harm
harm
noun
That which causes injury, damage, or loss.
detriment; misfortune.
emotional or figurative hurt
physical injury; hurt; damage
verb
To cause injury to another; to hurt; to cause damage to something.
harn
harp
harp
noun
(Scotland) A grain sieve.
(colloquial) A harmonica.
(music) A musical instrument consisting of a body and a curved neck, strung with strings of varying length that are stroked or plucked with the fingers and are vertical to the soundboard when viewed from the end of the body
Any instrument of the same musicological type.
Short for harp seal.
verb
(transitive) To play (a tune) on the harp.
(transitive) To play on (a harp or similar instrument).
(transitive, archaic) To develop or give expression to by skill and art; to sound forth as from a harp; to hit upon.
(usually with on) To repeatedly mention a subject.
harr
harr
noun
(Britain, dialectal) A sea mist
(Scotland) A wind from the east
(carpentry) The stile that bears the hinges of a gate.
hart
hart
noun
A male deer, especially the male of the red deer after his fifth year.
A male red deer or one of related species.
Obsolete spelling of heart
harv
harz
harz
Proper noun
A mountain range in Northern Germany; its rugged terrain extends across parts of Lower Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt and Thuringia.
hear
hear
intj
you hear me
verb
(intransitive, stative) To perceive sounds through the ear.
(transitive) To exercise this faculty intentionally; to listen to.
(transitive) To listen favourably to; to grant (a request etc.).
(transitive) To listen to (a person, case) in a court of law; to try.
(transitive) To receive information about; to come to learn of.
(transitive, informal) To sympathize with; to understand the feelings or opinion of.
(transitive, stative) To perceive (a sound, or something producing a sound) with the ear, to recognize (something) in an auditory way.
(with from) To be contacted by.
hera
hera
noun
(uncommon) A female hero; a heroine, especially in lesbian or feminist circles.
hoar
hoar
adj
(archaic) Figuratively, grey-haired with age.
(obsolete) Musty; mouldy; stale.
(poetic) Hoarily bearded.
Of a white or greyish-white colour.
noun
A white or greyish-white colour.
Hoariness; antiquity.
verb
(obsolete, intransitive) To become mouldy or musty.
hora
hora
noun
A branch of traditional Indian astrology, dealing with the finer points of predictive methods.
A circle dance popular in the Balkans, Israel and Yiddish culture worldwide.
hura
hvar
khar
phar
rach
rach
noun
(dialectal) a dog that hunts by scent
rahm
rahr
rahu
rahu
noun
Alternative form of rohu.
rakh
rash
rash
adj
(Northern England, archaic) Of corn or other grains: so dry as to fall out of the ear with handling.
Acting too quickly without considering the consequences and risks; not careful; hasty.
Requiring swift action; pressing; urgent.
Taking effect quickly and strongly; fast-acting.
adv
(archaic) Synonym of rashly (“in a rash manner; hastily or without due consideration”)
noun
(dermatology, medicine) An area of inflamed and irritated skin characterized by reddened spots that may be filled with fluid or pus; also, preceded by a descriptive word (rare or obsolete), an illness characterized by a type of rash.
(historical) Chiefly preceded by a descriptive word: a fabric with a smooth texture woven from silk, worsted, or a mixture of the two, intended as an inferior substitute for silk.
(obsolete) A soft crackling or rustling sound.
An irregular distribution or sprinkling of objects resembling a rash (sense 1).
An outbreak or surge in problems; a spate, string, or trend.
verb
(rare) Chiefly followed by out: to scrape or scratch (something); to obliterate.
(rare) Usually followed by up: to prepare (something) with haste; to cobble together, to improvise.
Chiefly followed by against, at, or upon: to collide or hit.
Chiefly followed by away, down, off, out, etc.: to pluck, pull, or rip (something) violently.
Of rain: to fall heavily.
To break (something) forcefully; to smash.
To emit or issue (something) hastily.
To forcefully move or push (someone or something) in a certain direction.
To hack, slash, or slice (something).
To move forcefully, hastily, or suddenly; to dash, to rush.
rath
rath
adj
Alternative form of rathe.
noun
(historical) A walled enclosure, especially in Ireland; a ringfort built sometime between the Iron Age and the Viking Age.
A Burmese carriage of state.
rhea
rhea
noun
A large flightless bird of the genus Rhea, native to South America.
Ramie (Boehmeria nivea), a fiber-yielding plant.
riha
shar
tahr
tahr
noun
Any of three genera of large Asian ungulates belonging to the subfamily Caprinae (goat-antelopes).