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8-letter words containing e, t, h, r, c

  • kvetcher — to complain, especially chronically.
  • merchant — a person who buys and sells commodities for profit; dealer; trader.
  • merchets — Plural form of merchet.
  • mitscherMarc Andrew, 1887–1947, U.S. naval officer and aviator.
  • orchanet — Alternative form of alkanet.
  • outreach — to reach beyond; exceed: The demand has outreached our supply.
  • patchery — the act of hurriedly patching something together
  • pentarch — a government by five persons.
  • petchary — a grey kingbird, Tyrannus dominicensis
  • petrarch — (Francesco Petrarca) 1304–74, Italian poet and scholar.
  • phreatic — noting or pertaining to ground water.
  • prefetch — instruction prefetch
  • re-teach — to impart knowledge of or skill in; give instruction in: She teaches mathematics. Synonyms: coach.
  • reattach — to fasten or affix; join; connect: to attach a photograph to an application with a staple.
  • reclothe — to clothe (someone or something) again or provide new clothing for (someone)
  • redditch — a town in W central England, in N Worcestershire: designated a new town in the mid-1960s; metal-working industries. Pop: 74 803 (2001)
  • resketch — to sketch again
  • restitch — one complete movement of a threaded needle through a fabric or material such as to leave behind it a single loop or portion of thread, as in sewing, embroidery, or the surgical closing of wounds.
  • retching — to make efforts to vomit.
  • retrench — to cut down, reduce, or diminish; curtail (expenses).
  • rhematic — pertaining to the formation of words.
  • rhetoric — (in writing or speech) the undue use of exaggeration or display; bombast.
  • ricochet — the motion of an object or a projectile in rebounding or deflecting one or more times from the surface over which it is passing or against which it hits a glancing blow.
  • ruthenic — containing ruthenium in a higher valence state than the corresponding ruthenious compound.
  • schubertFranz [frahnts] /frɑnts/ (Show IPA), 1797–1828, Austrian composer.
  • schuster — Leon. born 1951, South African comedian and film maker. His films include You Must Be Joking (1986) and Mr Bones (2001)
  • scouther — to scorch or singe
  • sketcher — a simply or hastily executed drawing or painting, especially a preliminary one, giving the essential features without the details.
  • snatcher — to make a sudden effort to seize something, as with the hand; grab (usually followed by at).
  • spitcher — the end or finish
  • stancher — staunch2 .
  • starched — a white, tasteless, solid carbohydrate, (C 6 H 1 0 O 5) n , occurring in the form of minute granules in the seeds, tubers, and other parts of plants, and forming an important constituent of rice, corn, wheat, beans, potatoes, and many other vegetable foods.
  • stitcher — one complete movement of a threaded needle through a fabric or material such as to leave behind it a single loop or portion of thread, as in sewing, embroidery, or the surgical closing of wounds.
  • strachey — (Giles) Lytton [jahylz lit-n] /dʒaɪlz ˈlɪt n/ (Show IPA), 1880–1932, English biographer and literary critic.
  • stretchy — having a tendency to stretch, especially excessively or unduly.
  • telechir — a robot arm controlled by a human operator
  • tetrarch — any ruler of a fourth part, division, etc.
  • teuchter — a derogatory word used by Lowlanders for a Highlander
  • thatcher — Margaret (Hilda) 1925–2013, British political leader: prime minister 1979–90.
  • the crab — the constellation Cancer, the fourth sign of the zodiac
  • the crow — the constellation Corvus
  • the crud — a disease; rot
  • the rack — an instrument of torture that stretched the body of the victim
  • the rich — wealthy people
  • thearchy — the rule or government of God or of a god.
  • theatric — of or relating to the theater or dramatic presentations: theatrical performances.
  • theocrat — a person who rules, governs as a representative of God or a deity, or is a member of the ruling group in a theocracy, as a divine king or a high priest.
  • theurgic — a system of beneficent magic practiced by the Egyptian Platonists and others.
  • thoraces — Anatomy. the part of the trunk in humans and higher vertebrates between the neck and the abdomen, containing the cavity, enclosed by the ribs, sternum, and certain vertebrae, in which the heart, lungs, etc., are situated; chest.
  • thridace — a sedative made from lettuce juice
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