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9-letter words containing e, t, h, r

  • butcherly — of or resembling a butcher
  • buteshire — (until 1975) a county of SW Scotland, consisting of islands in the Firth of Clyde and Kilbrannan Sound: formerly part of Strathclyde region (1975–96), now part of Argyll and Bute council area
  • car thief — a person who steals automobiles
  • carothers — Wallace Hume1896-1937; U.S. chemist
  • carthorse — A carthorse is a large, powerful horse that is used to pull carts or farm machinery.
  • cartouche — a carved or cast ornamental tablet or panel in the form of a scroll, sometimes having an inscription
  • cartwheel — If you do a cartwheel, you do a fast, circular movement with your body. You fall sideways, put your hands on the ground, swing your legs over, and return to a standing position.
  • catharise — purify
  • catharize — to purify or make clean
  • catharses — Plural form of catharsis.
  • cathedral — A cathedral is a very large and important church which has a bishop in charge of it.
  • catherine — Saint. died 307 ad, legendary Christian martyr of Alexandria, who was tortured on a spiked wheel and beheaded
  • catheters — Plural form of catheter.
  • cerecloth — waxed waterproof cloth of a kind formerly used as a shroud
  • champerty — (formerly) an illegal bargain between a party to litigation and an outsider whereby the latter agrees to pay for the action and thereby share in any proceeds recovered
  • chantress — a female chanter or singer
  • chantries — Plural form of chantry.
  • chapiters — Plural form of chapiter.
  • chapter 7 — the statute regarding liquidation proceedings that empowers a court to appoint a trustee to operate a failing business to prevent further loss
  • chapteral — of or pertaining to a chapter
  • chaptered — a main division of a book, treatise, or the like, usually bearing a number or title.
  • character — The character of a person or place consists of all the qualities they have that make them distinct from other people or places.
  • charecter — Misspelling of character.
  • charities — Plural form of charity.
  • charleton — a male given name.
  • charlotte — a baked dessert served hot or cold, commonly made with fruit and layers or a casing of bread or cake crumbs, sponge cake, etc
  • charmante — Silk fabric with a crepe back.
  • charoseth — haroseth.
  • charrette — a final, intensive effort to finish a project, especially an architectural design project, before a deadline.
  • chartable — a sheet exhibiting information in tabular form.
  • chartered — Chartered is used to indicate that someone, such as an accountant or a surveyor, has formally qualified in their profession.
  • charterer — a document, issued by a sovereign or state, outlining the conditions under which a corporation, colony, city, or other corporate body is organized, and defining its rights and privileges.
  • charteris — Leslie, original name Leslie Charles Bowyer Yin. 1907–93, British novelist, born in Singapore: created the character Simon Templar, known as The Saint, the central character in many adventure novels
  • chartless — not mapped; uncharted
  • chartreux — a breed of sturdy cat with short dense woolly fur
  • chartulae — charta (def 2).
  • chartwell — a house near Westerham in Kent: home for 40 years of Sir Winston Churchill
  • charvette — (Geordie, pejorative) A female charva.
  • chaseport — a porthole through which a gun was fired
  • chastener — to inflict suffering upon for purposes of moral improvement; chastise.
  • chastiser — Someone who chastises.
  • chattered — to talk rapidly in a foolish or purposeless way; jabber.
  • chatterer — A chatterer is the same as a chatterbox.
  • chatterji — Bankim Chandra [buhng-kim chuhn-druh] /ˈbʌŋ kɪm ˈtʃʌn drə/ (Show IPA), 1838–94, Indian novelist in the Bengali language.
  • cheeriest — Superlative form of cheery.
  • chelators — Plural form of chelator.
  • chemistry — Chemistry is the scientific study of the structure of substances and of the way that they react with other substances.
  • chemtrail — A contrail consisting of chemicals or biological agents deliberately sprayed at high altitudes, according to certain conspiracy theories.
  • cheralite — a rare monazite mineral consisting of thorium and calcium
  • chesstree — (in the 17th and 18th centuries) a wooden fastening with one or more sheaves, attached to the topside of a sailing vessel, through which the windward tack of a course was rove.
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