6-letter words containing a, c, e, h
- charge — If you charge someone an amount of money, you ask them to pay that amount for something that you have sold to them or done for them.
- charme — Obsolete spelling of charm.
- charre — Alternative form of charge (measure of 36 pigs of lead).
- chased — Pursue in order to catch or catch up with.
- chaser — A chaser is an alcoholic drink that you have after you have drunk a stronger or weaker alcoholic drink.
- chases — Plural form of chase.
- chasse — one of a series of gliding steps in ballet
- chaste — If you describe a person or their behaviour as chaste, you mean that they do not have sex with anyone, or they only have sex with their husband or wife.
- chavel — (obsolete) The jaw, especially, the jaw of a beast.
- chavez — Hugo (ˈuɡo). 1954–2013, Venezuelan socialist politician; president of Venezuela (1999–2013)
- chawed — Simple past tense and past participle of chaw, i.e. nonstandard variant of chewed.
- cheapo — Cheapo things are very inexpensive and probably of poor quality.
- cheapy — a cheaply made, often inferior, product: The movie studio made a dozen cheapies last year.
- cheats — Plural form of cheat.
- cheeta — Archaic form of cheetah.
- chelae — the pincerlike organ or claw terminating certain limbs of crustaceans and arachnids.
- chelan — Lake, a lake in N central Washington, in the Cascade Range: one of the deepest freshwater lakes in the U.S. 55 miles (89 km) long.
- chelas — Plural form of chela.
- chenab — a river rising in the Himalayas and flowing southwest to the Sutlej River in Pakistan. Length: 1087 km (675 miles)
- chenar — the oriental plane tree
- chetah — cheetah
- cheval — (obsolete) A horse; hence, a support or frame.
- choate — Rufus1799-1859; U.S. lawyer
- chorea — a disorder of the central nervous system characterized by uncontrollable irregular brief jerky movements
- cohead — a fellow principal or leader
- creagh — a raid or foray
- cuphea — any of various New World plants belonging to the genus Cuphea, of the loosestrife family, having tubular, usually reddish or purple flowers.
- detach — If you detach one thing from another that it is fixed to, you remove it. If one thing detaches from another, it becomes separated from it.
- e-cash — money that is exchanged electronically over computer or telecommunications networks.
- eacher — every one of two or more considered individually or one by one: each stone in a building; a hallway with a door at each end.
- eatche — a wood-working tool that has a blade that bends towards the handle and is used for paring or shaving
- echard — the water in soil that is not available for absorption by plants.
- encash — To convert a financial instrument or funding source into cash.
- eparch — The chief bishop of an eparchy.
- epocha — Archaic form of epoch.
- eschar — A dry, dark scab or falling away of dead skin, typically caused by a burn, or by the bite of a mite, or as a result of anthrax infection.
- exarch — (in the Orthodox Church) a bishop lower in rank than a patriarch and having jurisdiction wider than the metropolitan of a diocese.
- gauche — lacking social grace, sensitivity, or acuteness; awkward; crude; tactless: Their exquisite manners always make me feel gauche.
- getcha — (colloquial) Contraction of
- guache — Alternative spelling of gouache.
- hacked — to place (something) on a hack, as for drying or feeding.
- hackee — (US, dialect) The chickaree or red squirrel.
- hacker — a person, as an artist or writer, who exploits, for money, his or her creative ability or training in the production of dull, unimaginative, and trite work; one who produces banal and mediocre work in the hope of gaining commercial success in the arts: As a painter, he was little more than a hack.
- hackie — hack2 (def 7b).
- hackle — one of the long, slender feathers on the neck or saddle of certain birds, as the domestic rooster, much used in making artificial flies for anglers.
- hecate — a goddess of the earth and Hades, associated with sorcery, hounds, and crossroads.
- hecuba — Classical Mythology. the wife of Priam.
- heliac — pertaining to or occurring near the sun, especially applied to such risings and settings of a star as are most nearly coincident with those of the sun while yet visible.
- hepcat — a performer or admirer of jazz, especially swing.
- hexact — hexactinal