| habitual |
in accordance with habit; customary. [3 definitions] |
| habituate |
to make accustomed to. |
| habitude |
customary condition or practice. |
| habitué |
one who frequents a place, esp. of social gathering or entertainment. |
| hacienda |
in Spanish-speaking countries, a large estate used as a farm or ranch, or the estate owner's house. |
| hack1 |
to chop or cut up or off with repeated heavy blows. [8 definitions] |
| hack2 |
one who surrenders professional or artistic integrity or commitment in return for monetary reward. [12 definitions] |
| hackamore |
a simple bitless bridle of rope or rawhide with a reinforced noseband and single rope rein which together exert controlling pressure on the nose of a horse, used esp. for training. |
| hackberry |
a type of elm tree that bears small, edible, cherrylike fruit. [2 definitions] |
| hacker |
a computer user who is able to penetrate carefully protected computer networks, such as those of a government. [2 definitions] |
| hackie |
(informal) a taxi driver. |
| hackle |
one of the long, thin feathers on the neck or lower back of certain birds, such as the rooster. [3 definitions] |
| hackmatack |
a tamarack. [2 definitions] |
| hackney |
a horse suited for ordinary riding or driving. [4 definitions] |
| hackneyed |
made trite or commonplace by overuse, as an expression or phrase. |
| hacksaw |
a saw used to cut metal, with a tough, fine-toothed, short blade fixed in a frame. |
| had |
past tense and past participle of have. |
| had better |
used to state or warn that something bad might happen if you do not do something; should. |
| haddock |
a North Atlantic food fish, related to but smaller than cod. |
| Hades |
in Greek mythology, the underworld inhabited by the dead, or the god who rules there; Pluto. [3 definitions] |
| hadn't |
contracted form of "had not". |