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8-letter words containing r, h, e

  • carshare — to take turns in driving fellow commuters to and from work or friends' children to school and back, so as to avoid the unnecessary use of several underoccupied vehicles
  • carthage — an ancient city state, on the N African coast near present-day Tunis. Founded about 800 bc by Phoenician traders, it grew into an empire dominating N Africa and the Mediterranean. Destroyed and then rebuilt by Rome, it was finally razed by the Arabs in 697 ad
  • cashiers — Plural form of cashier.
  • cashmere — Cashmere is a kind of very fine, soft wool.
  • catchers — Plural form of catcher.
  • cathedra — a bishop's throne
  • catheter — A catheter is a tube which is used to introduce liquids into a human body or to withdraw liquids from it.
  • ceterach — any of a genus of ferns characterized by scales found on the underside of the fronds
  • chabrier — (Alexis) Emmanuel (emanɥɛl). 1841–94, French composer; noted esp for the orchestral rhapsody España (1883)
  • chaffery — the act of bargaining
  • chaffier — consisting of, covered with, or resembling chaff.
  • chairmen — the presiding officer of a meeting, committee, board, etc.
  • chalmersAlexander, 1759–1834, Scottish biographer, editor, and journalist.
  • chambers — a judge's room for hearing cases not taken in open court
  • chambery — a city in SE France, in the Alps: skiing centre; former capital of the duchy of Savoy. Pop: 59 188 (2006)
  • chamfers — Plural form of chamfer.
  • champers — Champers is champagne.
  • chancers — Plural form of chancer.
  • chancery — In Britain, the Chancery or Chancery Division is the Lord Chancellor's court, which is a division of the High Court of Justice.
  • chancier — Comparative form of chancy.
  • chandler — a dealer in a specified trade or merchandise
  • changers — Plural form of changer.
  • channery — an accumulation of thin, flat, coarse fragments of sandstone, limestone, or schist with diameters up to 6 inches (15 cm): used in Scotland and Ireland for gravel.
  • chanters — Plural form of chanter.
  • chanteur — a male singer, especially one who sings in nightclubs and cabarets.
  • chapelry — the district legally assigned to and served by an Anglican chapel
  • chaperon — (esp formerly) an older or married woman who accompanies or supervises a young unmarried woman on social occasions
  • chapiter — the capital of a column
  • chapters — Plural form of chapter.
  • chaptrel — a side pillar supporting the weight of an arch
  • charades — a parlour game in which one team acts out each syllable of a word, the other team having to guess the word
  • charente — a department of W central France, in Poitou-Charentes region. Capital: Angoulême. Pop: 341 275 (2003 est). Area: 5972 sq km (2329 sq miles)
  • charette — a final, intensive effort to finish a project, especially an architectural design project, before a deadline.
  • chargers — Plural form of charger.
  • chargeth — Archaic third-person singular form of charge.
  • charidee — a jocular spelling of charity, as pronounced in a mid-Atlantic accent
  • chariest — Superlative form of chary.
  • charlene — a female given name, form of Caroline.
  • charlies — a word used in communications to represent the letter C.
  • charline — a female given name, form of Caroline.
  • charlyne — a female given name, form of Caroline.
  • charmers — Plural form of charmer.
  • charneco — a type of sweet wine originating from Portugal
  • charnels — Plural form of charnel.
  • charnley — Sir John. 1911–82, British surgeon noted for his invention of an artificial hip joint and his development of hip-replacement surgery
  • charoset — a dish of chopped fruit, nuts, and wine eaten at Passover, representing the mortar that Jewish slaves used to build parts of Egypt
  • charrier — Comparative form of charry.
  • charters — Plural form of charter.
  • chartlet — a small chart indicating some special thing, as information relative to a radio navigational aid.
  • chartres — a city in NW France: Gothic cathedral; market town. Pop: 41 588 (2006)
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