| Vocabulary Words | Meanings |
|---|---|
| habit | something you do regularly and often, almost without thinking about it, such as brushing your teeth |
| habitation | residence, abode, occupancy |
| hackney | a horse kept for hire, a coach kept for hire |
| hadmaster | a woman who is responsible for all the teachers and pupils in a school |
| hail | frozen rain which falls as little lumps of ice |
| hair | the soft covering which grows on your head |
| hairbrush | a special brush you use for tidying and arranging your hair |
| hairdresser | someone who cuts and arranges people’s hair |
| hale | sound, healthy, robust |
| half | one of two equal parts. When you cut something in half, you divide it into tow parts which are exactly the same size |
| hall | the space inside the entrance of a building. The same word also means a large room used for special occasions, like a town hall |
| halo | a ring of light around the sun or moon, or around the heads of holy people in paintings |
| halt | to stop |
| halve | to divide into tow equal parts |
| hammer | a heavy tool for hitting or breaking things |
| hamper | a large basket with a lid, often used for carrying food. The same word also means to hinder |
| hamster | a little furry animal, usually golden-brown in colour. It is often kept as a pet |
| hand | the end of your arm which you use to hold things |
| handbag | a small light bag that you can carry in your hand |
| handcuff | a fetter for the hands or wrists |
| handful | as much as your hand will hold; a small number or quantity |
| handicap | to make something more difficult for someone |
| handicraft | work in which things are made by hand and not by machine |
| handkerchief | a small piece of cloth for wiping your nose or eyes |
| handle | the part or something by which you can hold it, like the handle of a cup. The same word also means to touch or hold things with your hands |
| handlebar | the part of a bicycle you hold on to and steer with |
| handsome | good-looking |
| handwork | work, like sewing or clay modelling, which you do with your hands |
| handy | useful and clever with your hands. The same word also means near; close at hand |
| hang | to fasten something to firm support so that it swings freely, but cannot fall |
| hanger | a shaped piece of metal or wood to hang clothes on so that they do not get wrinkled |
| haphazard | not planned; happening by chance |
| hapless | unlucky, unhappy |
| happen | to take place |
| happiness | joy; gladness |
| happy | full of joy |
| harass | to Vex, to tire with labour |
| harbour | a sheltered place where ships stay before going out to sea |
| hard | not soft. Stones are hard. The same word also means difficult |
| hard headed | shrewd, cunning, intelligent |
| harden | to make or become hard |
| hardly | scarcely; only just |
| hardy | tough; brave |
| hare | an animal like a large rabbit |
| harm | to damage or hurt |
| harmful | doing harm or damage |
| harmless | the opposite of harmful; doing no harm |
| harness | the straps and other equipment worn by a horse |
| harp | a big musical instrument shaped like a triangle. It has strings which you pluck to make music |
| harsh | rough or unkind |
Stressed and Unstressed
In English sentences content words are stressed while structural words are generally not.