| HAILERS | • hailers n. Plural of hailer. • HAILER n. one that hails. |
| HALIERS | • haliers n. Plural of halier. • HALIER n. a former monetary unit of Slovakia. |
| HILLERS | • hillers n. Plural of hiller. • HILLER n. something that hills. |
| HIRPLES | • hirples v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of hirple. • HIRPLE v. (Scots) to walk lamely. |
| HIRSELS | • hirsels n. Plural of hirsel. • HIRSEL v. (Scots) to herd sheep. |
| HIRSLED | • HIRSLE v. (Scots) to slide along. |
| HIRSLES | • HIRSLE v. (Scots) to slide along. |
| HURLIES | • hurlies n. Plural of hurly. • HURLY n. a large two-wheeled barrow. |
| LEISHER | • LEISH adj. (Scots) active, supple. |
| LUSHIER | • lushier adj. Comparative form of lushy: more lushy. • LUSHY adj. tipsy. |
| RELLISH | • rellish v. Obsolete form of relish. • rellish n. Obsolete form of relish. • RELLISH v. (Shakespeare) to warble. |
| SHALIER | • shalier adj. Comparative form of shaly: more shaly. • SHALY adj. resembling shale, also SHALEY. |
| SHRIVEL | • shrivel v. (Intransitive) To collapse inward; to crumble. • shrivel v. (Intransitive) To become wrinkled. • shrivel v. (Transitive) To draw into wrinkles. |
| SLITHER | • slither v. (Intransitive) To move about smoothly and from side to side. • slither v. (Intransitive) To slide. • slither adj. (Archaic) slithery; slippery. |