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7-letter words containing c, h, r

  • bircher — a member or supporter of the John Birch Society
  • blucher — a high shoe with laces over the tongue
  • borscht — a Russian and Polish soup based on beetroot
  • botcher — to spoil by poor work; bungle (often followed by up): He botched up the job thoroughly.
  • boucher — François (frɑ̃swa). 1703–70, French rococo artist, noted for his delicate ornamental paintings of pastoral scenes and mythological subjects
  • brachah — Hebrew terms usually translated as "blessing"
  • brachia — Anatomy. the part of the arm from the shoulder to the elbow.
  • brachy- — indicating something short
  • branch- — (in zoology) indicating gills
  • brecham — a straw collar for a draught-horse or ox
  • brioche — Brioche is a kind of sweet bread.
  • brochan — a type of thin porridge
  • broches — (in weaving tapestries) a device on which the filling yarn is wound, used as a shuttle in passing through the shed of the loom to deposit the yarn.
  • bronch- — broncho-
  • bronchi — bronchus
  • broncho — bronco
  • bruchid — any of a genus of small, often parasitic, beetles
  • buchner — Eduard (ˈeːduart). 1860–1917, German chemist who demonstrated that alcoholic fermentation is due to enzymes in the yeast: Nobel prize for chemistry 1907
  • butcher — A butcher is a shopkeeper who cuts up and sells meat. Some butchers also kill animals for meat and make foods such as sausages and meat pies.
  • c-sharp — C#
  • camphor — Camphor is a strong-smelling white substance used in various medicines, in mothballs, and in making plastics.
  • carhops — Plural form of carhop.
  • carlish — churlish or coarse
  • caroche — a stately ceremonial carriage used in the 16th and 17th centuries
  • carwash — a place, usually an area at a filling station, which has special equipment, such as rotating brushes and water jets, to wash a car
  • cashers — Plural form of casher.
  • cashier — A cashier is a person who customers pay money to or get money from in places such as shops or banks.
  • catarrh — Catarrh is a medical condition in which a lot of mucus is produced in your nose and throat. You may get catarrh when you have a cold.
  • catcher — In baseball, the catcher is the player who stands behind the batter. The catcher has a special glove for catching the ball.
  • chabrol — Claude (klod). 1930–2010, French film director, whose films, such as Le Beau Serge (1958), Les Biches (1968), Le Boucher (1969), Au coeur du mensonge (1999), and La Fleur du mal (2003) explore themes of jealousy, guilt, and murder
  • chadors — Plural form of chador.
  • chafers — Plural form of chafer.
  • chaffer — to haggle or bargain
  • chagres — a river in Panama, flowing southwest through Gatún Lake, then northwest to the Caribbean Sea
  • chagrin — Chagrin is a feeling of disappointment, upset, or annoyance, perhaps because of your own failure.
  • chaired — a seat, especially for one person, usually having four legs for support and a rest for the back and often having rests for the arms.
  • chakras — Plural form of chakra.
  • chamber — A chamber is a large room, especially one that is used for formal meetings.
  • chambre — (of wine) at room temperature
  • chamfer — a narrow flat surface at the corner of a beam, post, etc, esp one at an angle of 45°
  • champer — to bite upon or grind, especially impatiently: The horses champed the oats.
  • chancer — You can refer to someone as a chancer if you think they use opportunities for their own advantage and often pretend to have skills they do not have.
  • chancre — a small hard nodular growth, which is the first diagnostic sign of acquired syphilis
  • changer — a person or thing that changes something
  • channer — a mumble or murmur
  • chanter — a person who chants
  • chantry — an endowment for the singing of Masses for the soul of the founder or others designated by him or her
  • chapter — A chapter is one of the parts that a book is divided into. Each chapter has a number, and sometimes a title.
  • charact — a letter, character, or symbol impressed or engraved upon something
  • charade — If you describe someone's actions as a charade, you mean that their actions are so obviously false that they do not convince anyone.
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