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7-letter words containing a, r, c, h

  • charpai — a light bedstead used in India, consisting of a web of rope or tape netting.
  • charpakGeorges [zhawrzh] /ʒɔrʒ/ (Show IPA), 1924–2010, French physicist, born in Poland: Nobel Prize 1992.
  • charpie — a piece of lint used to make a surgical dressing
  • charpoy — a bedstead of woven webbing or hemp stretched on a wooden frame on four legs, common in India
  • charqui — meat, esp beef, cut into strips and dried
  • charred — Charred plants, buildings, or vehicles have been badly burnt and have become black because of fire.
  • charret — (obsolete) A chariot.
  • charted — a sheet exhibiting information in tabular form.
  • charter — A charter is a formal document describing the rights, aims, or principles of an organization or group of people.
  • charver — a young woman
  • charvet — a soft, lusterless silk or rayon tie fabric, often made with a faint stripe effect.
  • chasers — Plural form of chaser.
  • chaster — refraining from sexual intercourse that is regarded as contrary to morality or religion; virtuous.
  • chatter — If you chatter, you talk quickly and continuously, usually about things which are not important.
  • chaucer — Geoffrey. ?1340–1400, English poet, noted for his narrative skill, humour, and insight, particularly in his most famous work, The Canterbury Tales. He was influenced by the continental tradition of rhyming verse. His other works include Troilus and Criseyde, The Legende of Good Women, and The Parlement of Foules
  • chaumer — the living quarters used by farm workers
  • cheaper — costing very little; relatively low in price; inexpensive: a cheap dress.
  • cheater — A cheater is someone who cheats.
  • cheddar — Cheddar is a type of hard yellow cheese, originally made in Britain.
  • chikara — the attribute of might or force
  • 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.
  • chivari — shivaree.
  • chloral — a colourless oily liquid with a pungent odour, made from chlorine and acetaldehyde and used in preparing chloral hydrate and DDT; trichloroacetaldehyde
  • chobdar — a macebearer or attendant of a king or eminent dignitary in India
  • cholera — Cholera is a serious disease that often kills people. It is caused by drinking infected water or by eating infected food.
  • chorale — A chorale is a piece of music sung as part of a church service.
  • chorals — Plural form of choral.
  • chordal — of, relating to, or resembling a chord.
  • chorial — Embryology. the outermost of the extraembryonic membranes of land vertebrates, contributing to the formation of the placenta in the placental mammals.
  • chronal — Of or pertaining to time.
  • chuddar — a large shawl or veil worn by Muslim or Hindu women that covers them from head to foot
  • chukars — Plural form of chukar.
  • churban — the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem, first by the Babylonians in 587 bc and again by the Romans in 70 ad
  • cithara — a stringed musical instrument of ancient Greece and elsewhere, similar to the lyre and played with a plectrum
  • clasher — to make a loud, harsh noise: The gears of the old car clashed and grated.
  • coacher — a person who coaches; a coach.
  • cochair — to chair jointly
  • cochranJacqueline, 1910?–80, U.S. aviator.
  • cranach — Lucas (ˈluːkas), known as the Elder, real name Lucas Müller. 1472–1553, German painter, etcher, and designer of woodcuts
  • crashaw — Richard. 1613–49, English religious poet, noted esp for the Steps to the Temple (1646)
  • crashed — to make a loud, clattering noise, as of something dashed to pieces.
  • crasher — to make a loud, clattering noise, as of something dashed to pieces.
  • crashes — Plural form of crash.
  • crathur — (Ireland, obsolete) creature.
  • craunch — crunch
  • currach — coracle
  • curragh — a coracle.
  • cythera — a Greek island off the SE coast of the Peloponnese: in ancient times a centre of the worship of Aphrodite. Pop: 3354 (2001). Area: about 285 sq km (110 sq miles)
  • dharmic — (of religion or beliefs) of Indian origin
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