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7-letter words containing a, t, h

  • chattel — Chattels are things that belong to you.
  • chatter — If you chatter, you talk quickly and continuously, usually about things which are not important.
  • chayote — a tropical American cucurbitaceous climbing plant, Sechium edule, that has edible pear-shaped fruit enclosing a single enormous seed
  • cheated — to defraud; swindle: He cheated her out of her inheritance.
  • cheater — A cheater is someone who cheats.
  • cheetah — A cheetah is a wild animal that looks like a large cat with black spots on its body. Cheetahs can run very fast.
  • chelate — a coordination compound in which a metal atom or ion is bound to a ligand at two or more points on the ligand, so as to form a heterocyclic ring containing a metal atom
  • chianti — a mountain range in central Italy, in Tuscany, rising over 870 m (2900 ft): part of the Apennines
  • chilcat — Chilkat.
  • chilkat — a member of an Indian people of the Pacific coastal area of southeastern Alaska belonging to the Tlingit group of Indians.
  • choctaw — a member of a Native American people of Alabama
  • cholate — a cholic acid salt
  • chuleta — a cutlet or chop.
  • chutzpa — unmitigated effrontery or impudence; gall.
  • cithara — a stringed musical instrument of ancient Greece and elsewhere, similar to the lyre and played with a plectrum
  • claucht — to seize by force
  • claught — a simple past tense of cleek.
  • cohabit — If two people are cohabiting, they are living together and have a sexual relationship, but are not married.
  • colbathJeremiah Jones, Wilson, Henry.
  • crathur — (Ireland, obsolete) creature.
  • cushats — Plural form of cushat.
  • cyathus — an ancient measure of wine equivalent to approximately one twelfth of a pint
  • cynthia — a feminine name: dim. Cindy
  • 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)
  • dashpot — a device for damping vibrations; the vibrating part is attached to a piston moving in a liquid-filled cylinder
  • dearths — Plural form of dearth.
  • deathly — If you say that someone is deathly pale or deathly still, you are emphasizing that they are very pale or still, like a dead person.
  • dontcha — Eye dialect of don't you.
  • draught — a drawing, sketch, or design.
  • earhart — Amelia (Mary) 1897–1937, U.S. aviator: vanished in flight over Pacific Ocean.
  • earshot — the range or distance within which a sound, voice, etc., can be heard.
  • earthed — (British) Grounded, connected electrically to the ground.
  • earthen — composed of earth.
  • earthly — of or relating to the earth, especially as opposed to heaven; worldly.
  • eckhart — Johannes [yoh-hah-nuh s] /yoʊˈhɑ nəs/ (Show IPA), ("Meister Eckhart") c1260–1327? Dominican theologian and preacher: founder of German mysticism.
  • ecthyma — a contagious viral disease of sheep and goats and occasionally of humans, marked by vesicular and pustular lesions on the lips.
  • embathe — (archaic) To bathe.
  • empaths — Plural form of empath.
  • empathy — The ability to understand and share the feelings of another.
  • enchant — Fill (someone) with great delight; charm.
  • enhabit — Obsolete form of inhabit.
  • enthral — (transitive) To hold spellbound; to bewitch, charm or captivate.
  • epitaph — A phrase or statement written in memory of a person who has died, especially as an inscription on a tombstone.
  • erathem — the stratum of rocks representing a specific geological era
  • escheat — The reversion of property to the state, or (in feudal law) to a lord, on the owner’s dying without legal heirs.
  • etchant — An acid or corrosive chemical used in etching; a mordant.
  • ethanal — (organic compound) The IUPAC name for acetaldehyde, rarely used in research or industry.
  • ethanol — (organic compound) A simple aliphatic alcohol formally derived from ethane by replacing one hydrogen atom with a hydroxyl group: CH3-CH2-OH.
  • ethical — Of or relating to moral principles or the branch of knowledge dealing with these.
  • ethnica — Plural form of ethnicon.
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