|
ERICA |
Heath |
|
GRIG |
Heath. |
|
HEATHER |
Heath. |
|
MOORS |
Heath-covered regions |
|
|
EDWARD |
Ex-PM Heath |
|
HADDER |
Heather; heath. |
|
GENUS |
Heath; girl's name |
|
MOORLAND |
Tract of heath |
|
|
LEDGER |
Rocky shelf right below heath |
|
TED |
Heath or Danson partially demented |
|
HEATHCLAD |
Clad or crowned with heath. |
|
MOODIER |
Peter, out in the heath, getting grumpier |
|
SHAH |
So, Heath oddly becomes a Middle Eastern ruler |
|
KID |
A fagot; a bundle of heath and furze. |
|
MOORISH |
Having the characteristics of a moor or heath. |
|
HEATHERY |
Heathy; abounding in heather; of the nature of heath. |
|
HEATHY |
Full of heath; abounding with heath; as, heathy land;
heathy hills. |
|
WHOLE |
Possessing, or being in a state of, heath and soundness;
healthy; sound; well. |
|
SEA HEATH |
A low perennial plant (Frankenia laevis) resembling heath,
growing along the seashore in Europe. |
|
ERICACEOUS |
Belonging to the Heath family, or resembling plants of
that family; consisting of heats. |
|
TAMARIC |
A shrub or tree supposed to be the tamarisk, or perhaps
some kind of heath. |
|
HEATH |
A place overgrown with heath; any cheerless tract of country
overgrown with shrubs or coarse herbage. |
|
HEN |
The female of the domestic fowl; also, the female of grouse,
pheasants, or any kind of birds; as, the heath hen; the gray hen. |
|
MOOR |
An extensive waste covered with patches of heath, and having
a poor, light soil, but sometimes marshy, and abounding in peat; a
heath. |
|
ARBUTE |
The strawberry tree, a genus of evergreen shrubs, of the
Heath family. It has a berry externally resembling the strawberry; the
arbute tree. |