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8-letter words containing r, h, e

  • chasseur — a member of a unit specially trained and equipped for swift deployment
  • chatters — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of chatter.
  • chattery — to talk rapidly in a foolish or purposeless way; jabber.
  • chattier — Comparative form of chatty.
  • chauffer — a small portable heater or stove
  • chazerei — anything of little value; junk; garbage.
  • chearful — Archaic spelling of cheerful.
  • cheaters — eyeglasses, esp. dark glasses
  • cheatery — the act of cheating or deceiving
  • checkers — a game for two players using a checkerboard and 12 checkers each. The object is to jump over and capture the opponent's pieces
  • checkrow — a row of plants, esp corn, in which the spaces between adjacent plants are equal to those between adjacent rows to facilitate cultivation
  • cheddars — Plural form of cheddar.
  • cheddary — resembling or pertaining to cheddar cheese
  • cheekier — Comparative form of cheeky.
  • cheer on — When you cheer someone on, you shout loudly in order to encourage them, for example when they are taking part in a game.
  • cheer up — When you cheer up or when something cheers you up, you stop feeling depressed and become more cheerful.
  • cheerers — a shout of encouragement, approval, congratulation, etc.: The cheers of the fans filled the stadium.
  • cheerful — Someone who is cheerful is happy and shows this in their behaviour.
  • cheerier — Comparative form of cheery.
  • cheerily — in good spirits; cheerful; happy.
  • cheering — encouraging shouts from supporters, admirers etc
  • cheerios — Plural form of cheerio.
  • cheesier — Comparative form of cheesy.
  • chelator — an organic chemical that bonds with metal ions and produces a chelate compound
  • chelifer — Book-scorpion.
  • chemurgy — the branch of chemistry concerned with the industrial use of organic raw materials, esp materials of agricultural origin
  • cheniere — a hummock in a marshy region, with stands of evergreen oaks.
  • chephren — (Chephren) flourished late 26th century b.c, Egyptian king of the fourth dynasty (son of Cheops): builder of second pyramid at El Giza.
  • chequers — an estate and country house in S England, in central Buckinghamshire: the official country residence of the British prime minister
  • cheremis — Mari.
  • cherokee — a member of a Native American people formerly living in and around the Appalachian Mountains, now chiefly in Oklahoma; one of the Iroquois peoples
  • cheroots — Plural form of cheroot.
  • cherries — the fruit of any of various trees belonging to the genus Prunus, of the rose family, consisting of a pulpy, globular drupe enclosing a one-seeded smooth stone.
  • chertsey — a town in S England, in N Surrey on the River Thames. Pop: 10 323 (2001)
  • cherubic — If someone looks cherubic, they look sweet and innocent like a cherub.
  • cherubim — a celestial being. Gen. 3:24; Ezek. 1, 10.
  • cherubin — Obsolete form of cherub.
  • cherwell — 1st Viscount title of Frederick Alexander Lindemann (ˈlɪndəmən). 1886–1957, British physicist, born in Germany, noted for his research on heat capacity, aeronautics, and atomic physics. He was scientific adviser to Winston Churchill during World War II
  • cheshire — a former administrative county of NW England; administered since 2009 by the unitary authorities of Cheshire West and Chester, and Cheshire East: low-lying and undulating, bordering on the Pennines in the east; mainly agricultural: the geographic and ceremonial county includes Warrington and Halton, which became independent unitary authorities in 1998. Area 2077 sq km (802 sq miles)
  • chestier — Comparative form of chesty.
  • cheverel — a type of leather made from kidskin or goatskin
  • cheveret — a small English table of the 18th century, having an oblong top, one or two rows of drawers, and slender legs joined near the bottom by a shelf.
  • chevrons — Plural form of chevron.
  • chevrony — showing or displaying chevrons
  • chiefery — the responsibility and lands belonging to an Irish chief
  • chiggers — Plural form of chigger.
  • childern — Eye dialect of children.
  • childers — (Robert) Erskine. 1870–1922, Irish politician, executed by the Irish Free State for his IRA activities: author of the spy story The Riddle of the Sands (1903)
  • children — Children is the plural of child.
  • chillers — Plural form of chiller.
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