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8-letter words containing g, e, h, r

  • -grapher — indicating a person who writes about or is skilled in a subject
  • adhering — to stay attached; stick fast; cleave; cling (usually followed by to): The mud adhered to his shoes.
  • archmage — A very powerful mage.
  • argerich — Martha. born 1941, Argentinian concert pianist
  • bagheera — a crush-resistant velvet made of uncut pile and used in the manufacture of evening wear and wraps.
  • barghest — (in the North of England, esp Yorkshire) a goblin that appears in the shape of a dog as an omen of death or other misfortune
  • bear hug — A bear hug is a rather rough, tight, affectionate hug.
  • bear-hug — to greet with or hold in a bear hug: eager fans bear-hugging the victorious team.
  • bedright — a right expected in the marital bed
  • bergmehl — a light powdery variety of calcite
  • berthage — a place for mooring boats
  • berthing — a shelflike sleeping space, as on a ship, airplane, or railroad car.
  • blighter — You can refer to someone you do not like as a blighter.
  • borghese — a noble Italian family whose members were influential in Italian art and politics from the 16th to the 19th century
  • breughel — Jan Bruegel
  • brighten — If someone brightens or their face brightens, they suddenly look happier.
  • brighter — radiating or reflecting light; luminous; shining: The bright coins shone in the gloom.
  • brueghel — Jan (jɑn). 1568–1625, Flemish painter, noted for his detailed still lifes and landscapes
  • burghley — William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley. 1520–98, English statesman: chief adviser to Elizabeth I; secretary of state (1558–72) and Lord High Treasurer (1572–98)
  • burleigh — Burghley
  • carthage — an ancient city state, on the N African coast near present-day Tunis. Founded about 800 bc by Phoenician traders, it grew into an empire dominating N Africa and the Mediterranean. Destroyed and then rebuilt by Rome, it was finally razed by the Arabs in 697 ad
  • changers — Plural form of changer.
  • chargers — Plural form of charger.
  • chargeth — Archaic third-person singular form of charge.
  • cheering — encouraging shouts from supporters, admirers etc
  • chemurgy — the branch of chemistry concerned with the industrial use of organic raw materials, esp materials of agricultural origin
  • chiggers — Plural form of chigger.
  • choregic — relating to a choregus
  • choregus — the producer or financier of a dramatist's works in Ancient Greece
  • cohering — Present participle of cohere.
  • coughers — Plural form of cougher.
  • dahlgrenJohn Adelphus Bernard, 1809–70, U.S. naval officer and inventor.
  • daughter — Someone's daughter is their female child.
  • dogshore — any of several shores for holding the hull of a small or moderate-sized vessel in place after keel blocks and other shores are removed and until the vessel is launched.
  • dreggish — resembling or containing dregs
  • drogheda — a seaport in the NE Republic of Ireland, near the mouth of the Boyne River: the town was captured by Cromwell in 1649 and its garrisons as well as many male inhabitants put to the sword.
  • earthing — (often initial capital letter) the planet third in order from the sun, having an equatorial diameter of 7926 miles (12,755 km) and a polar diameter of 7900 miles (12,714 km), a mean distance from the sun of 92.9 million miles (149.6 million km), and a period of revolution of 365.26 days, and having one satellite.
  • echogram — a record produced by the action of an echograph.
  • encharge — (obsolete, transitive) To give to somebody as a charge; to entrust with a duty or task.
  • enhunger — to cause to be hungry
  • epigraph — An inscription on a building, statue, or coin.
  • etherege — Sir George. ?1635–?92, English Restoration dramatist; author of the comedies The Comical Revenge (1664), She would if she could (1668), and The Man of Mode (1676)
  • ethogram — a description of an animal's behaviour
  • euchring — Present participle of euchre.
  • fighters — Plural form of fighter.
  • flighter — (of birds) to fly feebly; flutter.
  • freights — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of freight.
  • freshing — newly made or obtained: fresh footprints.
  • frighted — Simple past tense and past participle of fright.
  • frighten — to make afraid or fearful; throw into a fright; terrify; scare.

On this page, we collect all 8-letter words with G-E-H-R. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 8-letter word that contains in G-E-H-R to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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