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

  • lyncher — to put to death, especially by hanging, by mob action and without legal authority.
  • machree — my dear.
  • 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.
  • matcher — a person or thing that equals or resembles another in some respect.
  • mchenry — a town in NE Illinois.
  • merchet — (obsolete) In Middle Ages England, a fine paid to a lord on a daughter's marriage, in recompense for the loss of a worker.
  • 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.
  • mitcher — Alternative form of micher.
  • moocher — to borrow (a small item or amount) without intending to return or repay it.
  • moucher — someone who eats hungrily or greedily
  • mulcher — a person or thing that mulches.
  • muncher — to chew with steady or vigorous working of the jaws, often audibly.
  • nephric — renal.
  • notcher — One who makes notches.
  • obrecht — Jacob [yah-kawp] /ˈyɑ kɔp/ (Show IPA), 1430–1505, Dutch composer and conductor.
  • ochered — any of a class of natural earths, mixtures of hydrated oxide of iron with various earthy materials, ranging in color from pale yellow to orange and red, and used as pigments.
  • oraches — Plural form of orache.
  • 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.
  • perched — a pole or rod, usually horizontal, serving as a roost for birds.
  • percher — a person or thing that perches.
  • perches — a former division of N France.
  • perchta — the goddess of death and of fertility: sometimes identified with Holle.
  • 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.
  • phrenic — Anatomy. of or relating to the diaphragm.
  • pilcher — a scabbard for a sword, or a similar outer covering
  • pincher — a person or thing that pinches.
  • pitcherMolly (Mary Ludwig Hays McCauley) 1754–1832, American Revolutionary heroine.
  • poacher — a pan having a tight-fitting lid and metal cups for steaming or poaching eggs.
  • preachy — tediously or pretentiously didactic.
  • proesch — Gilbert. Born 1942, an Italian artist who is noted esp for his photomontages and performance works with George Passmore
  • puncher — a thrusting blow, especially with the fist.
  • putcher — a trap for catching salmon
  • rachets — Plural form of rachet.
  • rancher — a person who owns or works on a ranch.
  • raschel — a type of loosely knitted fabric
  • ratchet — a toothed bar with which a pawl engages.
  • re-echo — to echo back, as a sound.
  • reaches — The upper, middle, or lower reaches of a river are parts of a river. The upper reaches are nearer to the river's source and the lower reaches are nearer to the sea into which it flows.
  • 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
  • recheck — examine or verify again
  • relache — an interval or period of rest, a break from something
  • 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.
  • rematch — to match again; duplicate: an attempt to rematch a shade of green paint.
  • repatch — to patch again
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