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7-letter words containing h, e, a, r

  • kachera — short trousers traditionally worn by Sikhs as a symbol of their religious and cultural loyalty: originally worn for ease of horse riding
  • kacheri — Alt form kachcheri.
  • karkheh — a river in SW Iran, flowing SW to marshes along the Tigris River. About 350 miles (565 km) long.
  • keturah — the second wife of Abraham. Gen. 25:1.
  • kythera — Cythera
  • larchen — Of or pertaining to the larch tree.
  • larches — Plural form of larch.
  • lathers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of lather.
  • lathery — consisting of, covered with, or capable of producing lather.
  • lathier — lathlike; long and thin.
  • laugher — a person who laughs.
  • leacher — to dissolve out soluble constituents from (ashes, soil, etc.) by percolation.
  • leather — the skin of an animal, with the hair removed, prepared for use by tanning or a similar process designed to preserve it against decay and make it pliable or supple when dry.
  • loather — unwilling; reluctant; disinclined; averse: to be loath to admit a mistake.
  • machree — my dear.
  • maghreb — the Arabic name for the NW part of Africa, generally including Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, and sometimes Libya.
  • mahseer — any of various large freshwater Indian cyprinid fishes, such as Barbus tor
  • manhire — Bill. born 1946, New Zealand poet and writer. His poetry collections include How to Take Off Your Clothes at the Picnic (1977), Zoetropes (1984), Sunshine (1996), and Lifted (2005)
  • marched — Simple past tense and past participle of march.
  • marchen — a German fairy tale or fictional story
  • marcher — an inhabitant of, or an officer or lord having jurisdiction over, a march or border territory.
  • marchesFrancis Andrew, 1825–1911, U.S. philologist and lexicographer.
  • marshes — a tract of low wet land, often treeless and periodically inundated, generally characterized by a growth of grasses, sedges, cattails, and rushes.
  • mashers — Plural form of masher.
  • matcher — a person or thing that equals or resembles another in some respect.
  • mauther — a girl
  • meather — Alternative spelling of mether.
  • menorah — a candelabrum having seven branches (as used in the Biblical tabernacle or the Temple in Jerusalem), or any number of branches (as used in modern synagogues).
  • mesarch — Botany. (of a primary xylem or root) developing from both the periphery and the center; having the older cells surrounded by the younger cells.
  • mishear — to hear incorrectly or imperfectly: to mishear a remark.
  • morphea — (medicine) localized scleroderma.
  • narthex — an enclosed passage between the main entrance and the nave of a church.
  • nuraghe — any of the large, tower-shaped, prehistoric stone structures found in Sardinia and dating from the second millennium b.c. to the Roman conquest.
  • oraches — Plural form of orache.
  • orphean — Greek Legend. a poet and musician, a son of Calliope, who followed his dead wife, Eurydice, to the underworld. By charming Hades, he obtained permission to lead her away, provided he did not look back at her until they returned to earth. But at the last moment he looked, and she was lost to him forever.
  • outhear — to perceive by the ear: Didn't you hear the doorbell?
  • oxheart — any large, heart-shaped variety of sweet cherry.
  • panther — the cougar or puma, Felis concolor.
  • parched — to make extremely, excessively, or completely dry, as heat, sun, and wind do.
  • pechora — a river in the NE Russian Federation in Europe, flowing from the Ural Mountains to the Arctic Ocean. 1110 miles (1785 km) long.
  • perahiaMurray, born 1947, U.S. pianist.
  • perchta — the goddess of death and of fertility: sometimes identified with Holle.
  • perhaps — maybe; possibly: Perhaps the package will arrive today.
  • phacker — (communications, security)   A telephone system cracker. A phacker may attempt to gain unauthorised access to a phone system in order to make free or untraceable calls or he may disrupt, alter or illegally tap phone systems via computer. The disruptions may include causing a phone line to be engaged so no calls go in or out, redirecting outgoing or incoming calls, as well as listening to actual calls made. Phackers are frequently confidence tricksters or phone freaks (nuisance callers who can only relate to other people by phone). Phackers are sometimes employed by illegal enterprises to conduct business using untraceable calls, or to disrupt, or follow legal authorities' investigations. Phackers interventions may be lethal to the person being phacked. A phacker may be a phone company employee, or usually, ex-employee who specialises in illegal phone system disruption, alteration or tapping via physically altering installations. A phacker is generally considered to be a socially and intellectually retarded cracker. See Captain Crunch.
  • phaedra — the wife of Theseus who fell in love with Hippolytus, her stepson, and eventually hanged herself after causing his death.
  • phalera — a metal disk or boss worn on a man's breast as an ornament or as a military decoration or used to adorn the harness of a horse.
  • phorate — a systemic insecticide, C 7 H 1 7 O 2 PS 3 , used especially as a soil treatment for the control of numerous crop-damaging insects.
  • phrased — Grammar. a sequence of two or more words arranged in a grammatical construction and acting as a unit in a sentence. (in English) a sequence of two or more words that does not contain a finite verb and its subject or that does not consist of clause elements such as subject, verb, object, or complement, as a preposition and a noun or pronoun, an adjective and noun, or an adverb and verb.
  • phrases — Grammar. a sequence of two or more words arranged in a grammatical construction and acting as a unit in a sentence. (in English) a sequence of two or more words that does not contain a finite verb and its subject or that does not consist of clause elements such as subject, verb, object, or complement, as a preposition and a noun or pronoun, an adjective and noun, or an adverb and verb.
  • plasher — a person who forms hedges by means of interweaving the branches or vines
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