(geology) A period of time between two geomagnetic reversals.
churn
churn
noun
(telecommunications) The mass of people who are ready to switch carriers.
(telecommunications) The time when a consumer switches his/her service provider.
A milk churn.
A vessel used for churning, especially for producing butter.
Customer attrition; the phenomenon or rate of customers leaving a company.
Cyclic activity that achieves nothing.
verb
(US, informal, finance, travel) To continually sign up for new credit cards in order to earn signup bonuses, airline miles, and other benefits.
(finance) To carry out wash sales in order to make the market appear more active than it really is.
(informal, travel, aviation) To repeatedly cancel and rebook a reservation in order to refresh ticket time limits or other fare rule restrictions.
(intransitive) To move rapidly and repetitively with a rocking motion; to tumble, mix or shake.
(of a customer) To stop using a company's product or service.
(transitive) To agitate rapidly and repetitively, or to stir with a rowing or rocking motion; generally applies to liquids, notably cream.
(transitive, figuratively) To produce excessive and sometimes undesirable or unproductive activity or motion.
grahn
harns
harns
noun
(now archaic, dialectal or rare) Brains.
hearn
hearn
verb
(dialectal) past participle of hear
henri
henry
henry
noun
(Britain, slang) A quantity of marijuana weighing one-eighth of an ounce.
(Britain, slang) A turd.
In the International System of Units, the derived unit of electrical inductance; the inductance induced in a circuit by a rate of change of current of one ampere per second and a resulting electromotive force of one volt. Symbol: H
herne
herns
herns
noun
plural of hern
heron
heron
noun
A long-legged, long-necked wading bird of the family Ardeidae.
hiren
hiren
Noun
A seductive woman; a courtesan.
honer
honer
noun
A tool used to hone.
Misspelling of honor/honour.
One who hones.
honor
honor
noun
(countable) a token of praise or respect; something that represents praiseworthiness or respect, such as a prize or award given by the state to a citizen
(feudal law) a seigniory or lordship held of the king, on which other lordships and manors depended
(golf) the right to play one's ball before one's opponent.
(heraldry, countable) the center point of the upper half of an armorial escutcheon (compare honour point)
(in the plural) (courses for) an honours degree: a university qualification of the highest rank
(in the plural) the privilege of going first
(uncountable) recognition of importance or value; respect; veneration (of someone, usually for being morally upright or successful)
(uncountable) the state of being morally upright, honest, noble, virtuous, and magnanimous; excellence of character; the perception of such a state; favourable reputation; dignity
a cause of respect and fame; a glory; an excellency; an ornament.
a privilege
verb
(transitive) to confer (bestow) an honour or privilege upon (someone)
(transitive) to conform to, abide by, act in accordance with (an agreement, treaty, promise, request, or the like)
(transitive) to make payment in respect of (a cheque, banker's draft, etc.)
(transitive) to think of highly, to respect highly; to show respect for; to recognise the importance or spiritual value of
horan
horne
horne
noun
Obsolete spelling of horn
horns
horns
noun
plural of horn
verb
Third-person singular simple present indicative form of horn
horny
horny
adj
(slang, informal) Sexually aroused.
(slang, informal) Sexually arousing.
Hard or bony, like an animal's horn.
Having horns.
Having the hard consistency and pale colour of an animal's horn.
huron
nahor
narah
nehru
norah
norah
Proper noun
name, a pseudo-Hebrew spelling of Nora, diminutive of Eleonora or Honora.
north
north
adj
(colloquial) More or greater than.
(ecclesiastical) Designating, or situated in, the liturgical north (in a church, the direction to the left-hand side of a person facing the altar).
(meteorology) Of wind, from the north.
Of or pertaining to the north; northern.
Pertaining to the part of a corridor used by northbound traffic.
Toward the north; northward.
adv
Toward the north; northward; northerly.
noun
(ecclesiastical) In a church: the direction to the left-hand side of a person facing the altar.
(physics) The positive or north pole of a magnet, which seeks the magnetic pole near Earth's geographic North Pole (which, for its magnetic properties, is a south pole).
Alternative letter-case form of North (“a northern region; the inhabitants thereof”).
One of the four principal compass points, specifically 0° (being directed towards the North Pole); conventionally upwards on a map.
The up or positive direction.
verb
(obsolete, intransitive) To turn or move toward the north.
phren
phren
noun
(obsolete, anatomy) The diaphragm.
(philosophy, historical) The brain or mind.
ranch
ranch
noun
(uncountable) Ranch dressing.
A house or property on a plot of ranch land.
A large plot of land used for raising cattle, sheep or other livestock.
A small farm that cultivates vegetables and/or livestock, especially one in the Southwestern United States.
verb
To operate a ranch; to engage in ranching.
To work on a ranch.
rhamn
rheen
rhein
rhein
noun
(organic chemistry) An anthraquinone found in rhubarb.
rhene
rhina
rhine
rhine
noun
(UK, dialect) A watercourse; a ditch for water.
rhino
rhino
noun
(colloquial) A rhinoceros.
(slang, now rare) Money.
rhona
rhona
Proper noun
name of Scottish origin.
rhynd
rhynd
noun
Alternative form of rynd (“type of support for a millstone”)
rhyne
rhyne
noun
A kind of Russian hemp.
A running waterway that links a ditch or stream to a river.
rinch
rinch
verb
(Southern US, Northern Ireland) Alternative form of rinse
rohan
rohan
noun
(obsolete) An East Indian timber tree.
rohun
runch
runch
noun
The wild radish.
verb
(Scotland, transitive) To grind, as with the teeth; to crunch.
sharn
sharn
noun
(chiefly Scotland) The dung or manure of cattle or sheep.
shorn
shorn
adj
Of a person, having had a haircut.
Of a sheep, etc., having been shorn.
verb
past participle of shear
thorn
thorn
noun
(botany) A sharp protective spine of a plant.
(figurative) That which pricks or annoys; anything troublesome.
A letter of Latin script (capital: Þ, small: þ), borrowed from the futhark; today used only in Icelandic to represent the voiceless dental fricative, but originally used in several early Germanic scripts, including Old English where it represented the dental fricatives that are today written th (Old English did not have phonemic voicing distinctions for fricatives).
Any shrub or small tree that bears thorns, especially a hawthorn.
verb
To pierce with, or as if with, a thorn (sharp pointed object).