7-letter words containing a, c, h, i
- chibcha — a member of a South American Indian people that lived in central Colombia and had a highly developed civilization
- chicago — a port in NE Illinois, on Lake Michigan: the third largest city in the US; it is a major railway and air traffic centre. Pop: 2 869 121 (2003 est)
- chicana — A Chicana is an American girl or woman whose family originally came from Mexico.
- chicane — a bridge or whist hand without trumps
- chicano — A chicano is an American citizen, whose family originally came from Mexico.
- chikara — the attribute of might or force
- chilcat — Chilkat.
- chilean — of or relating to Chile or its inhabitants
- chiliad — a group of one thousand
- chilian — A chiliarch; the commander or chief of a thousand men.
- chilkat — a member of an Indian people of the Pacific coastal area of southeastern Alaska belonging to the Tlingit group of Indians.
- chillan — a city in central Chile. Pop: 149 000 (2005 est)
- chillax — If you chillax, you relax and stop being angry or anxious.
- chiluba — Frederick, 1943–2011, president of Zambia 1991–2002.
- chimera — A chimera is an unrealistic idea that you have about something or a hope that you have that is unlikely to be fulfilled.
- chinars — Plural form of chinar.
- chindia — China and India considered together in economic and strategic terms
- chingma — the fiber of the Indian mallow.
- chinwag — a chat or gossipy conversation
- chivari — shivaree.
- chorial — Embryology. the outermost of the extraembryonic membranes of land vertebrates, contributing to the formation of the placenta in the placental mammals.
- cithara — a stringed musical instrument of ancient Greece and elsewhere, similar to the lyre and played with a plectrum
- clayish — Resembling clay.
- cochair — to chair jointly
- cohabit — If two people are cohabiting, they are living together and have a sexual relationship, but are not married.
- covilhã — Pero da (ˈpeːrʊ da). ?1460–?1526, Portuguese explorer, who established relations between Portugal and Ethiopia
- cynthia — a feminine name: dim. Cindy
- dharmic — (of religion or beliefs) of Indian origin
- diarchy — government by two states, individuals, etc
- dibrach — pyrrhic1 (def 3).
- didache — a treatise, perhaps of the 1st or early 2nd century ad, on Christian morality and practices
- echidna — Also called spiny anteater. any of several insectivorous monotremes of the genera Tachyglossus, of Australia, Tasmania, and New Guinea, and Zaglossus, of New Guinea, that have claws and a slender snout and are covered with coarse hair and long spines.
- edaphic — related to or caused by particular soil conditions, as of texture or drainage, rather than by physiographic or climatic factors.
- enchain — Bind with or as with chains.
- ethical — Of or relating to moral principles or the branch of knowledge dealing with these.
- ethnica — Plural form of ethnicon.
- fuchsia — a plant belonging to the genus Fuchsia, of the evening primrose family, including many varieties cultivated for their handsome drooping flowers.
- fuschia — Misspelling of fuchsia.
- gnathic — of or relating to the jaw.
- gracchi — Gaius Sempronius [gey-uh s sem-proh-nee-uh s] /ˈgeɪ əs sɛmˈproʊ ni əs/ (Show IPA), 153–121 b.c, and his brother, Tiberius Sempronius [tahy-beer-ee-uh s] /taɪˈbɪər i əs/ (Show IPA) 163–133 b.c., Roman reformers and orators.
- graphic — giving a clear and effective picture; vivid: a graphic account of an earthquake.
- h chain — either of an identical pair of Y -shaped polypeptides that, together with the light chains, constitute the antibody molecule.
- hack it — to cut, notch, slice, chop, or sever (something) with or as with heavy, irregular blows (often followed by up or down): to hack meat; to hack down trees.
- hackies — Plural form of hackie.
- hacking — a rack for drying food, as fish.
- hackish — (jargon) /hak'ish/ 1. Said of something that is or involves a hack. 2. Of or pertaining to hackers or the hacker subculture. See also true-hacker.
- haircap — any moss of the genus Polytrichum
- haircut — an act or instance of cutting the hair.
- halicot — haricot2 .
- hamachi — The Japanese name for Pacific yellowtail, especially when used in sushi and sashimi.