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6-letter words containing l, a, h

  • chalky — Something that is chalky contains chalk or is covered with chalk.
  • chally — a soft fabric of plain weave in wool, cotton, rayon, or other staple fiber, either in a solid color or, more often, a small print.
  • chalon — (obsolete) A bed blanket.
  • chalot — Plural form of chalah.
  • chanel — Gabrielle (ɡabriɛl), known as Coco Chanel. 1883–1971, French couturière and perfumer, who created "the little black dress" and the perfume Chanel No. 5
  • chapel — A chapel is a part of a church which has its own altar and which is used for private prayer.
  • chaulk — (obsolete, now only nonstandard, rare) alternative spelling of chalk.
  • chavel — (obsolete) The jaw, especially, the jaw of a beast.
  • chelae — the pincerlike organ or claw terminating certain limbs of crustaceans and arachnids.
  • chelanLake, a lake in N central Washington, in the Cascade Range: one of the deepest freshwater lakes in the U.S. 55 miles (89 km) long.
  • chelas — Plural form of chela.
  • cheval — (obsolete) A horse; hence, a support or frame.
  • chiral — designating or of an asymmetrical form, as a molecule, that cannot be superimposed on its mirror image
  • chital — axis deer.
  • cholla — any of several spiny cacti of the genus Opuntia that grow in the southwestern US and Mexico and have cylindrical stem segments
  • choral — Choral music is sung by a choir.
  • chulpa — a type of prehistoric stone tower, found in Brazil and Peru, having living quarters over a burial chamber.
  • clashy — (obsolete, regional) wet; rainy.
  • clatch — a squelching sound
  • cloath — (obsolete) cloth.
  • clutha — a river in New Zealand, the longest river in South Island; rising in the Southern Alps it flows southeast to the Pacific. Length: 338 km (210 miles)
  • culham — a village in S central England, in Oxfordshire: site of the UK centre for thermonuclear reactor research and of the Joint European Torus (JET) programme
  • dahlia — A dahlia is a garden flower with a lot of brightly coloured petals.
  • dahlin — (archaic, chemistry) inulin.
  • dakhla — an oasis in S Egypt: source of ocher.
  • daleth — the fourth letter of the Hebrew alphabet (ד), transliterated as d or, when final, dh
  • dealth — (obsolete) A share dealt out.
  • dhokla — A food, visually similar to cake and compositionally similar to khaman, made from a batter of gram flour (from chickpeas), cooked by steaming and typically eaten in India.
  • dholak — A dhol, especially a relatively small one.
  • dhulia — a city in Maharashtra state, W central India.
  • elijah — a Hebrew prophet of the 9th century bc, who was persecuted for denouncing Ahab and Jezebel. (I Kings 17–21: 21; II Kings 1–2:18)
  • elisha — a Hebrew prophet of the 9th century bc: successor of Elijah (II Kings 3–9)
  • enhalo — to surround with or as if with a halo
  • exhale — Breathe out in a deliberate manner.
  • fellah — a native peasant or laborer in Egypt, Syria, etc.
  • flanch — A flange.
  • flashy — sparkling or brilliant, especially in a superficial way or for the moment: a flashy performance.
  • flathe — Flan.
  • fleadh — a festival of Irish music, dancing, and culture
  • fulham — a die loaded at one corner either to favor a throw of 4, 5, or 6 (high fulham) or to favor a throw of 1, 2, or 3 (low fulham)
  • galahs — Plural form of galah.
  • galcha — a member of an Iranian people inhabiting the Pamirs.
  • galosh — a waterproof overshoe, especially a high one.
  • galuth — the forced exile of Jews, especially from countries where they were most persecuted.
  • gashly — hideous; ghastly
  • ghazal — (in Middle Eastern and Indian literature and music) a lyric poem with a fixed number of verses and a repeated rhyme, typically on the theme of love, and normally set to music.
  • gullah — a member of a population of black Americans inhabiting the Sea Islands and the coastal regions of South Carolina, Georgia, and northeastern Florida.
  • habile — skillful; dexterous; adroit.
  • hackle — one of the long, slender feathers on the neck or saddle of certain birds, as the domestic rooster, much used in making artificial flies for anglers.
  • hackly — rough or jagged, as if hacked: Some minerals break with a hackly fracture.
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