hippy2 |
variant of hippie. |
hip roof |
a roof whose sides and ends slope downward. |
hircine |
of or resembling a goat, esp. in odor. |
hire |
to take on as an employee for money or other reward. [5 definitions] |
hireling |
someone who hires himself or herself out, esp. to do menial or unpleasant tasks. [2 definitions] |
hire out |
to offer one's services for a fee. |
hiring hall |
an employment office or center, esp. one where a union places applicants in positions according to their seniority as union members, or by the principle of rotation. |
Hiroshima |
a city in southwest Honshu, Japan, on which the United States dropped an atomic bomb in August, 1945--the first use of a nuclear weapon in history. Hiroshima has been rebuilt and is a thriving city. |
hirsute |
covered with hair or stiff hairs; hairy or shaggy. |
his |
that thing or those things belonging to that male person or animal previously mentioned. [2 definitions] |
Hispanic |
Spanish or of Spanish descent or origin. [3 definitions] |
Hispaniola |
a West Indies island shared by Haiti in the western part and the Dominican Republic in the eastern part. |
hispid |
having a covering of bristlelike hairs, or stiff tiny projections, as the stems of some plants or certain animal parts. |
hiss |
to produce a sound by pushing air past teeth held close together, as if prolonging an "s." [4 definitions] |
hist |
used to command attention or silence. |
histamine |
an organic crystalline compound, produced esp. during an allergic reaction, that lowers blood pressure, dilates blood vessels, and increases stomach secretions. (Cf. antihistamine.) [2 definitions] |
histidine |
an aromatic amino acid, essential in humans and other animals, that is found in proteins. |
histo- |
tissue. |
histochemistry |
the study of the chemical makeup of tissues and cells. |
histocompatibility |
a condition allowing the cells or tissues of one person to be accepted by another, as in a blood transfusion or organ transplant. |
histogen |
cells that are the origin of new tissue, such as cambium in plant stems and roots. |