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6-letter words containing c, a, h

  • chigga — a young working-class person from Hobart, Tasmania
  • chimar — chimere
  • chinan — a city in and the capital of Shandong province, in E China.
  • chinar — The oriental plane tree, native from southeastern Europe to northern Iran.
  • chinas — Plural form of china.
  • chirac — Jacques (René) (ʒɑk). born 1932, French Gaullist politician: president of France (1995–2007); prime minister (1974–76 and 1986–88); mayor of Paris (1977–95)
  • chiral — designating or of an asymmetrical form, as a molecule, that cannot be superimposed on its mirror image
  • chital — axis deer.
  • choana — a nasal opening situated towards the back of the nasal cavity in vertebrates
  • choate — Rufus1799-1859; U.S. lawyer
  • chokra — a young male
  • cholla — any of several spiny cacti of the genus Opuntia that grow in the southwestern US and Mexico and have cylindrical stem segments
  • choora — an Indian dagger having a sharply pointed, single-edged blade.
  • choral — Choral music is sung by a choir.
  • chorda — a cord-like formation in the body
  • chorea — a disorder of the central nervous system characterized by uncontrollable irregular brief jerky movements
  • chroma — the attribute of a colour that enables an observer to judge how much chromatic colour it contains irrespective of achromatic colour present
  • chukar — a common Indian partridge, Alectoris chukar (or graeca), having red legs and bill and a black-barred sandy plumage
  • chukka — a period of continuous play, generally lasting 71⁄2 minutes
  • chulpa — a type of prehistoric stone tower, found in Brazil and Peru, having living quarters over a burial chamber.
  • chyack — to jeer at; tease; deride.
  • clashy — (obsolete, regional) wet; rainy.
  • clatch — a squelching sound
  • cloath — (obsolete) cloth.
  • clutha — a river in New Zealand, the longest river in South Island; rising in the Southern Alps it flows southeast to the Pacific. Length: 338 km (210 miles)
  • coachy — a coachman
  • cobhamSir John, Oldcastle, Sir John.
  • cohead — a fellow principal or leader
  • cohoba — parica.
  • concha — any bodily organ or part resembling a shell in shape, such as the external ear
  • cratch — a rack for holding fodder for cattle, etc
  • creagh — a raid or foray
  • cudahy — a city in SE Wisconsin, near Milwaukee.
  • culham — a village in S central England, in Oxfordshire: site of the UK centre for thermonuclear reactor research and of the Joint European Torus (JET) programme
  • cuphea — any of various New World plants belonging to the genus Cuphea, of the loosestrife family, having tubular, usually reddish or purple flowers.
  • curagh — a coracle.
  • cushat — a wood pigeon (Columba palumbus)
  • cushaw — a variety of crookneck squash (Cucurbita moschata) similar to the pumpkin
  • cutcha — crude; makeshift
  • dachas — Plural form of dacha.
  • dachau — a town in S Germany, in Bavaria: site of a Nazi concentration camp. Pop: 39 474 (2003 est)
  • datcha — a Russian country house or villa.
  • detach — If you detach one thing from another that it is fixed to, you remove it. If one thing detaches from another, it becomes separated from it.
  • diarch — (of a vascular bundle) having two strands of xylem
  • dincha — (eye dialect, informal) Didn't you.
  • doncha — (informal) don't you.
  • drachm — drachma.
  • e-cash — money that is exchanged electronically over computer or telecommunications networks.
  • eacher — every one of two or more considered individually or one by one: each stone in a building; a hallway with a door at each end.
  • eatche — a wood-working tool that has a blade that bends towards the handle and is used for paring or shaving
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