H

handouts (course materials), citing

hanged, hung

hardly

usage note

has got, have got, avoiding

has. See have

have

perfect tenses

subject-verb agreement (have vs. has)

headings

organizing ideas with

he, him, his

helping verbs (auxiliary verbs)

forming perfect tenses

her vs. she

he/she, his/her

usage note

he vs. him

hisself (nonstandard)

historical context

home page

for online course

hook

hopefully

however (conjunctive adverb)

at beginning of sentence

“how to” boxes, citing sources, MLA style

humanities, writing in. See also MLA papers, Chicago papers

hung, hanged

hyphen. See also dashes

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