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6-letter words containing c, o, h

  • cought — Misspelling of caught.
  • couthy — Alternative form of couthie.
  • cowish — the common name for Peucedanum Cous, an umbelliferous plant with an edible tuberous root found in North America
  • coyish — artfully or affectedly shy or reserved; slyly hesitant; coquettish.
  • croche — a knob or bud at the top of a stag's antler
  • crotch — Your crotch is the part of your body between the tops of your legs.
  • crouch — If you are crouching, your legs are bent under you so that you are close to the ground and leaning forward slightly.
  • dicho- — in two parts; in pairs
  • doncha — (informal) don't you.
  • douche — a jet or current of water, sometimes with a dissolved medicating or cleansing agent, applied to a body part, organ, or cavity for medicinal or hygienic purposes.
  • douchy — (pejorative) Like a douche bag.
  • droich — a dwarf
  • echoed — Simple past tense and past participle of echo.
  • echoer — a person who produces an echo
  • echoes — a repetition of sound produced by the reflection of sound waves from a wall, mountain, or other obstructing surface.
  • echoey — (of a sound) That echoes.
  • echoic — resembling an echo.
  • epocha — Archaic form of epoch.
  • epoche — Moment of theoretical suspension of all action.
  • epochs — Plural form of epoch.
  • gaucho — a native cowboy of the South American pampas, usually of mixed Spanish and Indian ancestry.
  • gotcha — I have got you (used to express satisfaction at having captured or defeated someone or uncovered their faults).
  • gothic — (usually initial capital letter) noting or pertaining to a style of architecture, originating in France in the middle of the 12th century and existing in the western half of Europe through the middle of the 16th century, characterized by the use of the pointed arch and the ribbed vault, by the use of fine woodwork and stonework, by a progressive lightening of structure, and by the use of such features as flying buttresses, ornamental gables, crockets, and foils.
  • grouch — to be sulky or morose; show discontent; complain, especially in an irritable way.
  • havocs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of havoc.
  • hecto- — denoting 100
  • hector — Classical Mythology. the eldest son of Priam and husband of Andromache: the greatest Trojan hero in the Trojan War, killed by Achilles.
  • henoch — Enoch (defs 1, 2).
  • heroic — Also, heroical. of, relating to, or characteristic of a hero or heroine.
  • hickokJames Butler ("Wild Bill") 1837–76, U.S. frontiersman.
  • hickox — Richard (Sidney). 1948–2008, British conductor; musical director of the City of London Sinfonia and Singers (1971–2008)
  • hocked — the state of being deposited or held as security; pawn: She was forced to put her good jewelry in hock.
  • hocker — pawn1 .
  • hocket — a technique in medieval musical composition in which two or three voice parts are given notes or short phrases in rapid alternation, producing an erratic, hiccuping effect.
  • hockey — ice hockey.
  • hockle — (of a rope) to have the yarns spread and kinked through twisting in use.
  • hoicks — a cry used to encourage hounds to hunt
  • holmic — of or containing the element holmium.
  • honcho — a leader, especially an assertive leader; chief.
  • hootch — a thatched hut of southeast Asia.
  • horace — (Quintus Horatius Flaccus) 65–8 b.c, Roman poet and satirist.
  • hormic — activity directed toward a goal; purposive effort.
  • hpcode — Stack-based intermediate language used by HP in many of its compilers for RISC and stack-based architectures. Supports Fortran, Ada, Pascal, COBOL and C++. Descended from Stanford's U-code.
  • ichno- — track, footprint, trace
  • inchon — a seaport in W South Korea.
  • jochum — Eugen (ˈɔyɡeːn). 1902–87, German orchestral conductor
  • kocher — Emil Theodor [ey-meel tey-oh-dohr] /ˈeɪ mil ˈteɪ oʊˌdoʊr/ (Show IPA), 1841–1917, Swiss physiologist, pathologist, and surgeon: Nobel Prize 1909.
  • kochia — any plant of the widely distributed annual genus Kochia, esp K. Scoparia trichophila, grown for its foliage, which turns dark red in the late summer: family Chenopodiaceae
  • lochan — (Scotland) A small loch.
  • lochia — the liquid discharge from the uterus after childbirth.
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