7-letter words containing h, e, t, r
- nethers — The private parts of the body, particularly the sex organs.
- nighter — (only in combinations) Someone or something who does something for a certain number of nights.
- norther — Chiefly Texas and Oklahoma. a cold gale from the north, formed during the winter by a vigorous outbreak of continental polar air behind a cold front.
- notcher — One who makes notches.
- obrecht — Jacob [yah-kawp] /ˈyɑ kɔp/ (Show IPA), 1430–1505, Dutch composer and conductor.
- oughter — (archaic, or, dialectal) Ought to.
- outhear — to perceive by the ear: Didn't you hear the doorbell?
- outhire — to hire out
- overhit — to hit too hard or too far, as in tennis.
- overhot — too hot
- oxheart — any large, heart-shaped variety of sweet cherry.
- panther — the cougar or puma, Felis concolor.
- penrith — a market town in NW England, in Cumbria. Pop: 14 471 (2001)
- perchta — the goddess of death and of fertility: sometimes identified with Holle.
- philter — a potion, charm, or drug supposed to cause the person taking it to fall in love, usually with some specific person.
- philtre — philter.
- 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.
- pitcher — Molly (Mary Ludwig Hays McCauley) 1754–1832, American Revolutionary heroine.
- potherb — any herb prepared as food by cooking in a pot, as spinach, or added as seasoning in cookery, as thyme.
- pothery — humid; stuffy
- preheat — to heat before using or before subjecting to some further process: to preheat an oven before baking a cake.
- prithee — pray thee; please
- prophet — a person who speaks for God or a deity, or by divine inspiration.
- psather — (language) A parallel extension of Sather for a clustered shared memory model. It features threads synchronised by monitor objects ("gates"); locality assertions and placement operators. There is an implementation for the CM-5.
- putcher — a trap for catching salmon
- rachets — Plural form of rachet.
- ratchet — a toothed bar with which a pawl engages.
- rathest — soonest, earliest
- rathole — a hole made by a rat, as into a room, barn, etc.: The first chore in the old building is to plug up the ratholes.
- rebirth — a new or second birth: the rebirth of the soul.
- recatch — to catch (something or someone) again
- rechart — a sheet exhibiting information in tabular form.
- recheat — (in a hunt) the sounding of the horn to call back or signal to the hounds
- red hat — the broad-brimmed official hat of a Roman Catholic cardinal, symbolic of the office or rank of a cardinal.
- red hot — red with heat; very hot.
- red-hot — red with heat; very hot.
- refight — to fight (someone or something) again
- rehovot — a town in central Israel, SE of Tel Aviv.
- relatch — a device for holding a door, gate, or the like, closed, consisting basically of a bar falling or sliding into a catch, groove, hole, etc.
- relight — to ignite or cause to ignite again
- rematch — to match again; duplicate: an attempt to rematch a shade of green paint.
- repatch — to patch again
- reshoot — to shoot (a film, scene, photograph) again
- resight — the power or faculty of seeing; perception of objects by use of the eyes; vision.
- retched — to make efforts to vomit.
- reteach — to teach again
- rethink — the act of reconsidering.
- retouch — to improve with new touches, highlights, or the like; touch up or rework, as a painting or makeup.
- reuther — Walter Philip, 1907–70, U.S. labor leader: president of the UAW 1946–70; president of the CIO 1952–55.
- rexroth — Kenneth, 1905–82, U.S. poet, critic, and translator.