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7-letter words containing c, h, e, n

  • luncher — Someone who lunches, someone who eats lunch.
  • lunches — a light midday meal between breakfast and dinner; luncheon.
  • lynched — Simple past tense and past participle of lynch.
  • lyncher — to put to death, especially by hanging, by mob action and without legal authority.
  • lynches — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of lynch.
  • lynchet — a terrace or ridge formed in prehistoric or medieval times by ploughing a hillside
  • machine — an apparatus consisting of interrelated parts with separate functions, used in the performance of some kind of work: a sewing machine.
  • manchet — a kind of white bread made from the finest flour.
  • marchen — a German fairy tale or fictional story
  • maunche — a conventional representation of a sleeve with a flaring end, used as a charge.
  • mchenry — a town in NE Illinois.
  • mechlin — French Malines. Flemish Mechelen [mekh-uh-luh n] /ˈmɛx ə lən/ (Show IPA). a city in N Belgium.
  • menschy — Upstanding; having integrity and responsibility.
  • munched — to chew with steady or vigorous working of the jaws, often audibly.
  • munchen — German name of Munich.
  • muncher — to chew with steady or vigorous working of the jaws, often audibly.
  • munches — to chew with steady or vigorous working of the jaws, often audibly.
  • munchie — crunchy or chewy. Informal. for snacking: munchy foods like popcorn and cookies.
  • natchez — a port in SW Mississippi, on the Mississippi River.
  • nechako — a river in central British Columbia, Canada, flowing NE and E to the Fraser river. About 150 miles (240 km) long.
  • nephric — renal.
  • nethack — (games)   /net'hak/ (Unix) A dungeon game similar to rogue but more elaborate, distributed in C source over Usenet and very popular at Unix sites and on PC-class machines (nethack is probably the most widely distributed of the freeware dungeon games). The earliest versions, written by Jay Fenlason and later considerably enhanced by Andries Brouwer, were simply called "hack". The name changed when maintenance was taken over by a group of hackers originally organised by Mike Stephenson. Version: NetHack 3.2 (Apr 1996?). E-mail: <[email protected]>.
  • niceish — quite nice, fairly nice
  • nichole — a female given name.
  • nitches — Plural form of nitch.
  • nitchie — a contemptuous term used to refer to a North-American Indian.
  • notched — an angular or V -shaped cut, indentation, or slit in an object, surface, or edge.
  • notchel — a person of whom it has been announced that their debts will not be paid for them
  • notcher — One who makes notches.
  • notches — an angular or V -shaped cut, indentation, or slit in an object, surface, or edge.
  • nouches — Plural form of nouch.
  • panache — a grand or flamboyant manner; verve; style; flair: The actor who would play Cyrano must have panache.
  • panoche — Also, penuche. a coarse grade of sugar made in Mexico.
  • patchenKenneth, 1911–72, U.S. poet and novelist.
  • penuche — Also, panocha. Northern, North Midland, and Western U.S. a fudgelike candy made of brown sugar, butter, and milk, usually with nuts.
  • phocine — of or relating to seals.
  • phrenic — Anatomy. of or relating to the diaphragm.
  • pinched — to squeeze or compress between the finger and thumb, the teeth, the jaws of an instrument, or the like.
  • pincher — a person or thing that pinches.
  • planche — a flat piece of metal, stone, or baked clay, used as a tray in an enameling oven.
  • pschent — the double crown worn by ancient Egyptian kings, symbolic of dominion over Upper and Lower Egypt, which had previously been separate kingdoms.
  • punched — a tool or machine for perforating or stamping materials, driving nails, etc.
  • puncher — a thrusting blow, especially with the fist.
  • punches — the chief male character in a Punch-and-Judy show.
  • quechan — Yuma (defs 1, 2).
  • quinche — to move, to wince
  • rancher — a person who owns or works on a ranch.
  • sachsen — German name of Saxony.
  • sanchezSonia (Wilsonia Driver) born 1934, U.S. poet, activist, and teacher.
  • schnell — a German word meaning quick
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