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

  • machzor — machzors, Hebrew. mahzor.
  • marched — Simple past tense and past participle of march.
  • marchen — a German fairy tale or fictional story
  • marcher — an inhabitant of, or an officer or lord having jurisdiction over, a march or border territory.
  • marchesFrancis Andrew, 1825–1911, U.S. philologist and lexicographer.
  • matcher — a person or thing that equals or resembles another in some respect.
  • mcgrath — Glenn (Donald). born 1970, Australian cricketer: played 124 test matches (1993–2007) and took 563 wickets, a record for a fast bowler
  • mesarch — Botany. (of a primary xylem or root) developing from both the periphery and the center; having the older cells surrounded by the younger cells.
  • mizrach — a decorative figure, usually bearing an inscription, that is hung on the eastern wall in Jewish homes or synagogues to indicate the direction to face in prayer.
  • monarch — a hereditary sovereign, as a king, queen, or emperor.
  • morchas — Plural form of morcha.
  • navarch — (historical, Ancient Greece) The commander of a fleet.
  • nomarch — the governor of a nome or a nomarchy.
  • oraches — Plural form of orache.
  • orchard — an area of land devoted to the cultivation of fruit or nut trees.
  • parched — to make extremely, excessively, or completely dry, as heat, sun, and wind do.
  • pechora — a river in the NE Russian Federation in Europe, flowing from the Ural Mountains to the Arctic Ocean. 1110 miles (1785 km) long.
  • perchta — the goddess of death and of fertility: sometimes identified with Holle.
  • phacker — (communications, security)   A telephone system cracker. A phacker may attempt to gain unauthorised access to a phone system in order to make free or untraceable calls or he may disrupt, alter or illegally tap phone systems via computer. The disruptions may include causing a phone line to be engaged so no calls go in or out, redirecting outgoing or incoming calls, as well as listening to actual calls made. Phackers are frequently confidence tricksters or phone freaks (nuisance callers who can only relate to other people by phone). Phackers are sometimes employed by illegal enterprises to conduct business using untraceable calls, or to disrupt, or follow legal authorities' investigations. Phackers interventions may be lethal to the person being phacked. A phacker may be a phone company employee, or usually, ex-employee who specialises in illegal phone system disruption, alteration or tapping via physically altering installations. A phacker is generally considered to be a socially and intellectually retarded cracker. See Captain Crunch.
  • poacher — a pan having a tight-fitting lid and metal cups for steaming or poaching eggs.
  • pochard — an Old World diving duck, Aythya ferina, having a chestnut-red head.
  • preachy — tediously or pretentiously didactic.
  • purbach — a walled plain in the third quadrant of the face of the moon: about 75 miles (120 km) in diameter.
  • purchasSamuel, 1575?–1626, English writer and editor of travel books.
  • rachets — Plural form of rachet.
  • rachial — Botany. the axis of an inflorescence when somewhat elongated, as in a raceme. (in a pinnately compound leaf or frond) the prolongation of the petiole along which the leaflets are disposed. any of various axial structures.
  • rackhamArthur, 1867–1939, English illustrator and painter.
  • rancher — a person who owns or works on a ranch.
  • raploch — a coarse homespun woollen material
  • raschel — a type of loosely knitted fabric
  • ratchet — a toothed bar with which a pawl engages.
  • raunchy — vulgar or smutty; crude; earthy; obscene: a raunchy joke.
  • reaches — The upper, middle, or lower reaches of a river are parts of a river. The upper reaches are nearer to the river's source and the lower reaches are nearer to the sea into which it flows.
  • recatch — to catch (something or someone) again
  • rechart — a sheet exhibiting information in tabular form.
  • recheat — (in a hunt) the sounding of the horn to call back or signal to the hounds
  • relache — an interval or period of rest, a break from something
  • relatch — a device for holding a door, gate, or the like, closed, consisting basically of a bar falling or sliding into a catch, groove, hole, etc.
  • rematch — to match again; duplicate: an attempt to rematch a shade of green paint.
  • repatch — to patch again
  • reteach — to teach again
  • rhachis — rachis.
  • rhaetic — of or relating to a series of rocks formed in the late Triassic period
  • richard — (Duke of Gloucester) 1452–85, king of England 1483–85.
  • roached — Nautical. the upward curve at the foot of a square sail. (loosely) a convexity given to any of the edges of a sail; round.
  • schaerf — Adolf [ah-dawlf] /ˈɑ dɔlf/ (Show IPA), 1890–1965, Austrian statesman: president 1957–65.
  • schirra — Walter Marty, Jr [mahr-tee] /ˈmɑr ti/ (Show IPA), 1923–2007, U.S. astronaut.
  • schmear — a dab, as of cream cheese, spread on a roll, bagel, or the like.
  • scholar — a learned or erudite person, especially one who has profound knowledge of a particular subject.
  • schrank — (in Pennsylvania Dutch furniture) a two-door clothes cabinet one side of which has drawers and shelves and the other side an open space for hanging clothes.
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