6-letter words containing h, e, r, c
- chrome — (as modifier)
- chypre — a perfume made from sandalwood
- cipher — A cipher is a secret system of writing that you use to send messages.
- cither — cittern
- coheir — a person who inherits jointly with others
- cohere — If the different elements of a piece of writing, a piece of music, or a set of ideas cohere, they fit together well so that they form a united whole.
- copher — Obsolete form of coffer.
- cosher — to pamper or coddle
- creagh — a raid or foray
- creche — A crèche is a place where small children can be left to be looked after while their parents are doing something else.
- creesh — fat or grease
- crieth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cry.
- croche — a knob or bud at the top of a stag's antler
- cypher — cipher
- dreich — (Scotland, Northern Ireland) Bleak, miserable, dismal, cheerless, dreary.
- drench — to wet thoroughly; soak.
- dretch — (transitive) To vex; grill; trouble; oppress.
- driech — dree.
- eacher — every one of two or more considered individually or one by one: each stone in a building; a hallway with a door at each end.
- echard — the water in soil that is not available for absorption by plants.
- echoer — a person who produces an echo
- enrich — Improve or enhance the quality or value of.
- eparch — The chief bishop of an eparchy.
- eschar — A dry, dark scab or falling away of dead skin, typically caused by a burn, or by the bite of a mite, or as a result of anthrax infection.
- escher — M(aurits) C(ornelis)1898-1972; Du. graphic artist
- etcher — A person who etches.
- euchre — A card game for two to four players, usually played with the thirty-two highest cards, the aim being to win at least three of the five tricks played.
- exarch — (in the Orthodox Church) a bishop lower in rank than a patriarch and having jurisdiction wider than the metropolitan of a diocese.
- french — of, relating to, or characteristic of France, its inhabitants, or their language, culture, etc.: French cooking.
- hacker — a person, as an artist or writer, who exploits, for money, his or her creative ability or training in the production of dull, unimaginative, and trite work; one who produces banal and mediocre work in the hope of gaining commercial success in the arts: As a painter, he was little more than a hack.
- hector — Classical Mythology. the eldest son of Priam and husband of Andromache: the greatest Trojan hero in the Trojan War, killed by Achilles.
- herdic — a low-hung carriage with two or four wheels, having the entrance at the back and the seats at the sides.
- heroic — Also, heroical. of, relating to, or characteristic of a hero or heroine.
- hicker — an unsophisticated, boorish, and provincial person; rube.
- hocker — pawn1 .
- horace — (Quintus Horatius Flaccus) 65–8 b.c, Roman poet and satirist.
- hucker — Someone who hucks (any meaning).
- incher — something that has or is associated with a height or length of an inch or a specified number of inches (often used in combination): The flat-screen televisions are 23-inchers.
- kocher — Emil Theodor [ey-meel tey-oh-dohr] /ˈeɪ mil ˈteɪ oʊˌdoʊr/ (Show IPA), 1841–1917, Swiss physiologist, pathologist, and surgeon: Nobel Prize 1909.
- lecher — a man given to excessive sexual indulgence; a lascivious or licentious man.
- macher — A person who gets things done.
- marche — The, a region in central Italy, bordering the Adriatic. 3743 sq. mi. (9695 sq. km).
- micher — One who goes sneaking about for dishonest or improper purposes; one who skulks, or keeps out of sight; a pander or go-between.
- nicher — a neigh
- ochrea — ocrea.
- ochred — to color or mark with ocher.
- orache — any plant of the genus Atriplex, especially A. hortensis, of the amaranth family, cultivated for use like spinach.
- perche — a former division of N France.
- preach — to proclaim or make known by sermon (the gospel, good tidings, etc.).
- rachel — Jacob's favorite wife, the mother of Joseph and Benjamin. Gen. 29–35.