These are the meanings of the letters HAPPI when you unscramble them.
- ahi (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- app (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- Hap (n.)
A cloak or plaid.
- Hap (n.)
That which happens or comes suddenly or unexpectedly; also, the manner of occurrence or taking place; chance; fortune; accident; casual event; fate; luck; lot.
- Hap (v. i.)
To happen; to befall; to chance.
- Hap (v. t.)
To clothe; to wrap.
- Hip (interj.)
Used to excite attention or as a signal; as, hip, hip, hurra!
- Hip (n.)
Alt. of Hipps
- Hip (n.)
In a bridge truss, the place where an inclined end post meets the top chord.
- Hip (n.)
The external angle formed by the meeting of two sloping sides or skirts of a roof, which have their wall plates running in different directions.
- Hip (n.)
The fruit of a rosebush, especially of the English dog-rose (Rosa canina).
- Hip (n.)
The projecting region of the lateral parts of one side of the pelvis and the hip joint; the haunch; the huckle.
- Hip (v. t.)
To dislocate or sprain the hip of, to fracture or injure the hip bone of (a quadruped) in such a manner as to produce a permanent depression of that side.
- Hip (v. t.)
To make with a hip or hips, as a roof.
- Hip (v. t.)
To throw (one's adversary) over one's hip in wrestling (technically called cross buttock).
- Pah (interj.)
An exclamation expressing disgust or contempt. See Bah.
- Pah (n.)
A kind of stockaded intrenchment.
- Pap (n.)
A nipple; a mammilla; a teat.
- Pap (n.)
A rounded, nipplelike hill or peak; anything resembling a nipple in shape; a mamelon.
- Pap (n.)
A soft food for infants, made of bread boiled or softtened in milk or water.
- Pap (n.)
Nourishment or support from official patronage; as, treasury pap.
- Pap (n.)
The pulp of fruit.
- Pap (v. t.)
To feed with pap.
- phi (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- pia (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
- Pip (n.)
A contagious disease of fowls, characterized by hoarseness, discharge from the nostrils and eyes, and an accumulation of mucus in the mouth, forming a \"scale\" on the tongue. By some the term pip is restricted to this last symptom, the disease being called roup by them.
- Pip (n.)
A seed, as of an apple or orange.
- Pip (n.)
One of the conventional figures or \"spots\" on playing cards, dominoes, etc.
- Pip (v. i.)
To cry or chirp, as a chicken; to peep.