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8-letter words containing a, d, h, r

  • chondria — a profusely branched red alga, Chondria tenuissima, of the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of North America.
  • chordata — the phylum comprising the chordates.
  • chordate — any animal of the phylum Chordata, including the vertebrates and protochordates, characterized by a notochord, dorsal tubular nerve cord, and pharyngeal gill slits
  • chresard — the amount of water present in the soil that is available to plants
  • clochard — a tramp
  • crashpad — a place to sleep or live temporarily
  • dahlgrenJohn Adelphus Bernard, 1809–70, U.S. naval officer and inventor.
  • damanhur — a city in NE Egypt, in the Nile delta. Pop: 229 000 (2005 est)
  • damrosch — Walter (Johannes)1862-1950; U.S. conductor & composer, born in Germany
  • darshana — any of the six principal systems of philosophy.
  • dassehra — an annual Hindu festival celebrated on the 10th lunar day of Navaratri; images of the goddess Durga are immersed in water
  • daughter — Someone's daughter is their female child.
  • demarche — move, step, or manoeuvre, esp in diplomatic affairs
  • detacher — One who or that which detaches.
  • diagraph — a device for enlarging or reducing maps, plans, etc
  • diarchal — Relating to, or pertaining to, diarchy or a diarchy system.
  • diarrhea — If someone has diarrhea, a lot of liquid feces comes out of their body because they are ill.
  • didrachm — (in ancient Greece) a silver coin worth two drachmas
  • die hard — If you say that habits or attitudes die hard, you mean that they take a very long time to disappear or change, so that it may not be possible to get rid of them completely.
  • die-hard — a person who vigorously maintains or defends a seemingly hopeless position, outdated attitude, lost cause, or the like.
  • diehards — Plural form of diehard.
  • digraphs — Plural form of digraph.
  • dihedral — having or formed by two planes.
  • dinarchy — duarchy.
  • disheart — Obsolete form of dishearten.
  • dishoard — to put previously withheld (money) into circulation
  • dishrags — Plural form of dishrag.
  • dishware — dishes used for food; tableware.
  • dorothea — a female given name: from a Greek word meaning “gift of God.”.
  • dpsather — Data-parallel Sather. deterministic fine-grained parallelism. E-mail: <[email protected]>. ftp://lynx.csis.dit.csiro.au/p/pub/ather/dpsather.papers.
  • drabbish — Somewhat drab in colour.
  • drachmas — Plural form of drachma.
  • draffish — resembling draff
  • drammach — an uncooked mixture of meal, usually oatmeal, and cold water.
  • dramshop — bar; barroom; saloon.
  • draughts — a drawing, sketch, or design.
  • draughty — characterized by or admitting currents of air, usually uncomfortable.
  • drawhole — a funnel-shaped vertical opening cut at the bottom of a stope, which permits the loading of ore into conveyances in the passageways below.
  • drogheda — a seaport in the NE Republic of Ireland, near the mouth of the Boyne River: the town was captured by Cromwell in 1649 and its garrisons as well as many male inhabitants put to the sword.
  • drophead — (British) Shortened form of 'drophead coupé'.
  • drumhead — the membrane stretched upon a drum.
  • dry wash — clothes, curtains, etc., washed and dried but not yet ironed. Compare wet wash.
  • dwarfish — like a dwarf, especially in being abnormally small; diminutive.
  • dwarvish — Synonym of dwarfish.
  • dyschroa — an alteration of colour on the skin
  • eberhard — Johann August (joˈhan ˈaʊɡʊst). 1739–1809, German philosopher and lexicographer, best known for his German dictionary (1795–1802)
  • endarchy — a central government
  • farmhand — a person who works on a farm, especially a hired worker; hired hand.
  • fathered — a male parent.
  • fauchard — a shafted weapon having a knifelike blade with a convex cutting edge and a beak on the back for catching the blade of an aggressor's weapon.
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