7-letter words containing r, e, t, h, i
- moither — (Yorkshire, dialect) to bother or harass.
- mothier — Comparative form of mothy.
- neither — not either; not the one or the other: Neither statement is true.
- nighter — (only in combinations) Someone or something who does something for a certain number of nights.
- outhire — to hire out
- overhit — to hit too hard or too far, as in tennis.
- penrith — a market town in NW England, in Cumbria. Pop: 14 471 (2001)
- philter — a potion, charm, or drug supposed to cause the person taking it to fall in love, usually with some specific person.
- philtre — philter.
- pitcher — Molly (Mary Ludwig Hays McCauley) 1754–1832, American Revolutionary heroine.
- prithee — pray thee; please
- rebirth — a new or second birth: the rebirth of the soul.
- refight — to fight (someone or something) again
- relight — to ignite or cause to ignite again
- resight — the power or faculty of seeing; perception of objects by use of the eyes; vision.
- rethink — the act of reconsidering.
- rhaetia — an ancient Roman province in central Europe, comprising what is now E Switzerland and a part of the Tyrol: later extended to the Danube.
- rhaetic — of or relating to a series of rocks formed in the late Triassic period
- rhetian — of or relating to Rhaetia.
- richest — having wealth or great possessions; abundantly supplied with resources, means, or funds; wealthy: a rich man; a rich nation.
- richter — Burton, born 1931, U.S. physicist: Nobel prize 1976.
- righted — in accordance with what is good, proper, or just: right conduct.
- righten — to set right
- righter — a just claim or title, whether legal, prescriptive, or moral: You have a right to say what you please.
- routhie — abundant, plentiful, or well filled
- shifter — a person or thing that shifts.
- shortie — a person of less than average stature (sometimes used as a disparaging and offensive term of address).
- sighter — the power or faculty of seeing; perception of objects by use of the eyes; vision.
- slither — to slide down or along a surface, especially unsteadily, from side to side, or with some friction or noise: The box slithered down the chute.
- swither — a state of confusion, excitement, or perplexity.
- techier — irritable; touchy.
- theiler — Max, 1899–1972, South African medical scientist, in the U.S. after 1922: Nobel Prize in medicine 1951.
- theoric — a theory or conjecture
- therein — in or into that place or thing.
- theriac — molasses; treacle.
- therian — (in some classification systems) belonging or pertaining to the group Theria, comprising the marsupial and placental mammals and their extinct ancestors.
- thermic — thermal (def 1).
- thermit — a mixture of aluminium powder and a metal oxide, such as iron oxide, which when ignited reacts with the evolution of heat to yield aluminium oxide and molten metal: used for welding and in some types of incendiary bombs
- theroid — of, relating to, or resembling a beast
- thicker — having relatively great extent from one surface or side to the opposite; not thin: a thick slice.
- thigger — a beggar or a person who thigs
- thiller — a thill-horse; a horse that goes between and supports the thills of a cart
- thinker — French Le Penseur. a bronze statue (1879–89) by Rodin.
- thinner — a volatile liquid, as turpentine, used to dilute paint, varnish, rubber cement, etc., to the desired or proper consistency.
- thirled — to pierce.
- thither — Also, thitherward [thith -er-werd, th ith -] /ˈθɪð ər wərd, ˈðɪð-/ (Show IPA), thitherwards. to or toward that place or point; there.
- thorite — a rare mineral, thorium silicate, ThSiO 4 , occurring in the form of yellow or black crystals.
- thriven — to prosper; be fortunate or successful.
- thriver — to prosper; be fortunate or successful.
- thrives — to prosper; be fortunate or successful.