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Definition, Scrabble score, anagrams & word-game reference
Yes. HOOD is a valid Scrabble word in the UnscrambleTools dictionary (4 letters, 8 base points). It is suitable for casual Scrabble, Words with Friends practice, and anagram study; official tournament lists (NASPA/WESPA) may differ slightly.
Part of speech: noun
(slang) a neighborhood
bonnet, cowl, cowling, exhaust hood, lens hood, cap, hoodlum, goon, punk, thug, tough, toughie, strong-armer
Source: Princeton WordNet 3.1
HOOD scores 8 points before board multipliers.
Letter counts: D×1, H×1, O×2
HOOD has no other anagrams in this dictionary.
HOOD is a 4-letter answer slot candidate. Filter by length 4, starts with H, ends with D, or contains letters from your crossing entries in the Crossword Solver and Pattern Finder.
Example: "HOOD — (slang) a neighborhood" (8 Scrabble points).
HOOD is listed in the UnscrambleTools word-game dictionary used across our unscrambler, anagram, pattern, and scoring tools. Pages like this one exist so you can answer "Is HOOD a Scrabble word?" with data — not guesswork — before you play a tile or fill a crossword slot.
HOOD (noun): (zoology) an expandable part or marking that resembles a hood on the head or neck of an animal. Additional senses: protective covering consisting of a metal part that covers the engine; "there are powerful engines under the hoods of new cars"; "the mechanic removed the cowling in order to repair the plane's engine"; a headdress that protects the head and face; the folding roof of a carriage.
In standard Scrabble scoring, HOOD totals 8 points before multipliers. That sum uses official letter values: common tiles (A, E, I, O, U, L, N, S, T, R) are worth 1, while D and G are 2, B, C, M, P are 3, F, H, V, W, Y are 4, K is 5, J and X are 8, and Q and Z are 10. HOOD relies mostly on common tiles, which often makes it easier to play from a mixed rack but caps the raw ceiling compared with high-premium words.
HOOD is 4 letters long, begins with H, ends with D, and sorts to the alphagram DHOO. No other entry in this dictionary rearranges into the same letter set, so HOOD is unique within its alphagram family. Letter makeup: 2 vowels, 2 consonants.
Among 17 tracked 4-letter entries, HOOD ranks by raw score (8 points). Similar-length words in the same dictionary include ZIZZ, JAZZ, FIZZ, FUZZ; open their word pages to compare endings, vowel weight, and crossover potential.
Strategically, HOOD carries 2 vowels and 2 consonants. Its vowel-heavy shape often plays cleanly from racks with excess vowels. Hooks on H or D are common study angles; browse words starting with H and words ending with D to rehearse parallel sets.
HOOD is a 4-letter answer slot candidate. Filter by length 4, starts with H, ends with D, or contains letters from your crossing entries in the Crossword Solver and Pattern Finder. For American-style grids, 4-letter entries like HOOD frequently cross shorter words; knowing that HOOD contains D, H, O helps you test crossing letters quickly. When you only know a few cells, open the Crossword Solver with a pattern such as h??d to narrow candidates before checking definitions.
Notable letter pairs inside HOOD include HO, OD, OO — each links to a "contains" list for deeper drilling. Unique letters used: H, O, D. Letter-frequency tables on this site are built from the same dictionary that powers the Word Unscrambler, so list pages and word pages stay consistent.
Use UnscrambleTools tools together: unscramble hood directly in the Word Unscrambler, rehearse rearrangements in the Anagram Solver, filter crossword slots in the Pattern Finder, and verify 8 points in the Scrabble Score Calculator. Daily puzzle hints and Wordle practice pages share the same dictionary backbone, which keeps scores and validity aligned across the site.
Etymology: UnscrambleTools does not publish a full historical etymology for every rare word-game entry. When we detect recognizable English prefixes or suffixes, we note them in the definition section; otherwise treat HOOD as a playable vocabulary item for puzzles and study.
Example usage: Example: "HOOD — (slang) a neighborhood" (8 Scrabble points). If you are validating a tournament list, cross-check NASPA or WESPA references — our dictionary optimizes for practical word-game coverage, including obscure but legal entries that appear in casual Scrabble and crossword construction.