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9-letter words containing r, e, c, h, o

  • cosphered — sharing the same sphere
  • cothamore — a frieze fabric, often used in the manufacture of overcoats.
  • cow horse — cow pony.
  • cristophe — Henri [ahn-ree] /ɑ̃ˈri/ (Show IPA), ("Henri I"I) 1767–1820, Haitian revolutionary general, born in Grenada: king 1811–20.
  • crocheted — made with a crochet hook
  • crocheter — needlework done with a needle having a small hook at one end for drawing the thread or yarn through intertwined loops.
  • cromlechs — Plural form of cromlech.
  • crossed-h — a constant used in quantum mechanics, equal to the Planck constant divided by 2π. It has a value of 1.054571596±0.000000078 × 10 −34 joule seconds
  • crosshead — a subsection or paragraph heading printed within the body of the text
  • crotchets — Plural form of crotchet.
  • crotchety — A crotchety person is bad-tempered and easily irritated.
  • cryolathe — an instrument for reshaping the cornea to correct severe nearsightedness or farsightedness: the cornea is removed from the eye, rapidly frozen, reshaped, and reinserted.
  • cryophile — (biology) An organism that thrives at low temperatures.
  • cryophyte — an organism, esp an alga or moss, that grows on snow or ice
  • cupholder — a competitor who has won or successfully defended a specific cup, trophy, championship, etc.; champion.
  • cybergoth — (uncountable) A subculture combining elements of goth and rave culture, typically involving energetic electronic music and brightly coloured, futuristic clothing.
  • cybershop — Purchase or shop for goods and services on a website.
  • decachord — a ten-stringed musical instrument
  • decoherer — a device that re-establishes a coherer to usual levels of receptiveness
  • delaroche — (Hippolyte) Paul. 1797–1859, French painter of portraits and sentimental historical scenes, such as The Children of Edward IV in the Tower (1830)
  • dichroite — cordierite.
  • ditrochee — a form of poetic meter in which two trochees constitute one metrical unit.
  • dordrecht — a city in SW Netherlands, on the Waal River.
  • dowitcher — any of several long-billed, snipelike shore birds of North America and Asia, especially Limnodromus griseus.
  • eachother — (nonstandard) misspelling of each other Typically used in the context of
  • echiuroid — any wormlike invertebrate of the phylum Echiuroidea, found in sand and mud of tropical and subtropical seas, having at the mouth a ciliated, often elongated prostomium.
  • echo word — a word that is echoic (sense 2), or onomatopoeic
  • echograph — a device that records oceanic depths by means of sonic waves.
  • echovirus — any of numerous retroviruses of the picornavirus group, some harmless and others associated with various human disorders, as aseptic meningitis.
  • ecohazard — any substance or activity that poses a threat to a habitat or an environment: Off-the-road motorcycling is an ecohazard to fragile desert habitats.
  • ecosphere — Also called physiological atmosphere. the part of the atmosphere in which it is possible to breathe normally without aid: the portion of the troposphere from sea level to an altitude of about 13,000 feet (4000 meters).
  • ectomorph — a person of the ectomorphic type.
  • ectotherm — a cold-blooded animal.
  • enchorial — Indigenous, native.
  • endorheic — (of a lake or basin) Internally drained; having no outlet.
  • escheator — a person appointed to deal with escheats
  • euchloric — relating to euchlorine
  • eurobeach — a beach that has been designated as suitable for bathing from because it meets the limits set by European Union regulations for bacteria in bathing areas
  • eutrophic — (of a lake or other body of water) rich in nutrients and so supporting a dense plant population, the decomposition of which kills animal life by depriving it of oxygen.
  • exophoric — Relating to, or exhibiting, exophora.
  • forecheck — Play an aggressive style of defense, checking opponents in their own defensive zone, before they can organize an attack.
  • forechoir — antechoir.
  • forecloth — a cloth hung over the front of something, esp an altar
  • forehocks — Plural form of forehock.
  • forereach — to gain, as one ship on another.
  • foreshock — a relatively small earthquake that precedes a greater one by a few days or weeks and originates at or near the focus of the larger earthquake.
  • foreteach — to teach (something) ahead of time
  • forfochen — exhausted
  • forthcame — Simple past form of forthcome.
  • forthcome — To come forth.
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