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

  • funchal — a group of eight islands off the NW coast of Africa, part of Portugal. 308 sq. mi. (798 sq. km). Capital: Funchal.
  • graunch — Make a crunching or grinding noise.
  • huanuco — a city in central Peru.
  • hunched — to thrust out or up in a hump; arch: to hunch one's back.
  • hunches — A feeling or guess based on intuition rather than known facts.
  • kechuan — Quechuan.
  • kuching — a state in the federation of Malaysia, on NW Borneo: formerly a British crown colony (1946–63) and British protectorate (1888–1946). About 50,000 sq. mi. (129,500 sq. km). Capital: Kuching.
  • kutchin — a member of a group of North American Indians who live in the region of the lower Mackenzie River in northwestern Canada and the Yukon and Porcupine rivers of northeastern Alaska.
  • lunched — Simple past tense and past participle of lunch.
  • luncher — Someone who lunches, someone who eats lunch.
  • lunches — a light midday meal between breakfast and dinner; luncheon.
  • maunche — a conventional representation of a sleeve with a flaring end, used as a charge.
  • mcluhanMarshall, 1911–80, Canadian cultural historian and mass-communications theorist.
  • 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.
  • noguchi — Hideyo [hee-de-yaw] /ˈhi dɛˌyɔ/ (Show IPA), 1876–1928, Japanese physician and bacteriologist in the U.S.
  • nonsuch — a person or thing without equal; paragon.
  • nouches — Plural form of nouch.
  • paunchy — having a large and protruding belly; potbellied: a paunchy middle-aged man.
  • penuche — Also, panocha. Northern, North Midland, and Western U.S. a fudgelike candy made of brown sugar, butter, and milk, usually with nuts.
  • 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
  • raunchy — vulgar or smutty; crude; earthy; obscene: a raunchy joke.
  • ruching — material for making a ruche.
  • schuman — Robert [rob-ert;; French raw-ber] /ˈrɒb ərt;; French rɔˈbɛr/ (Show IPA), 1886–1963, French political leader: premier of France 1947–48.
  • scrunch — to crunch, crush, or crumple.
  • sichuan — a province in S central China. 219,691 sq. mi. (569,000 sq. km). Capital: Chengdu.
  • squinch — a small arch, corbeling, or the like, built across the interior angle between two walls, as in a square tower for supporting the side of a superimposed octagonal spire.
  • staunch — firm or steadfast in principle, adherence, loyalty, etc., as a person: a staunch Republican; a staunch friend.
  • tuchman — Barbara (Wertheim) [wurt-hahym] /ˈwɜrt haɪm/ (Show IPA), 1912–1989, U.S. historian and writer.
  • tulchan — the skin of a calf placed next to a cow to induce it to give milk
  • uisnech — the father of Naoise.
  • unchain — to free from or as if from chains; set free.
  • unchair — to remove from a chair; unseat
  • uncharm — to remove an enchantment from; to free from the influence of a spell or charm; disenchant
  • unchary — not cautious or chary; incautious
  • uncheck — to remove a check mark from; deselect
  • unchild — to deprive of children; to remove the children from; to render childless
  • unchoke — to free of obstruction or congestion.
  • uncouth — awkward, clumsy, or unmannerly: uncouth behavior; an uncouth relative who embarrasses the family.
  • unhitch — to free from attachment; unfasten: to unhitch a locomotive from a train.
  • unlatch — to unfasten (a door, window shutter, etc.) by lifting the latch.
  • unmacho — not macho
  • unperch — to remove or knock from a perch
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