5-letter words containing r, h
- charr — char3
- chars — Plural form of char.
- chart — A chart is a diagram, picture, or graph which is intended to make information easier to understand.
- chary — If you are chary of doing something, you are fairly cautious about doing it.
- chear — (obsolete) cheer.
- cheer — When people cheer, they shout loudly to show their approval or to encourage someone who is doing something such as taking part in a game.
- chere — dear; beloved: used in referring to or addressing a woman or girl.
- cheri — a female given name.
- chert — a microcrystalline form of silica usually occurring as bands or layers of pebbles in sedimentary rock. Formula: SiO2. Varieties include flint, lyddite (Lydian stone)
- chirk — showing a cheery and sprightly disposition
- chirl — a trilling or quavering sound
- chirm — the chirping of birds
- chiro — a chiropractor
- chirp — When a bird or an insect such as a cricket or grasshopper chirps, it makes short high-pitched sounds.
- chirr — (esp of certain insects, such as crickets) to make a shrill trilled sound
- chirt — an act of pressing or squashing that expresses liquid
- chiru — a Tibetan antelope, Pantholops hodgsoni, having a dense woolly pinkish-brown fleece prized as the source of shahtoosh wool: now close to extinction due to illegal slaughter for its fleece
- choir — A choir is a group of people who sing together, for example in a church or school.
- chord — A chord is a number of musical notes played or sung at the same time with a pleasing effect.
- chore — A chore is a task that you must do but that you find unpleasant or boring.
- choro — (music) A genre of Brazilian popular music.
- chris — a male given name, form of Christopher.
- chron — (geology) A period of time between two geomagnetic reversals.
- churl — a surly ill-bred person
- churn — A churn is a container which is used for making butter.
- churr — a low, trilled or whirring sound made by some birds or insects
- crash — A crash is an accident in which a moving vehicle hits something and is damaged or destroyed.
- crith — a unit of weight for gases, equal to the weight of one litre of hydrogen at standard pressure and temperature (0.09 grams)
- crush — To crush something means to press it very hard so that its shape is destroyed or so that it breaks into pieces.
- cruth — Alternative form of crwth.
- crwth — an ancient stringed instrument of Celtic origin similar to the cithara but bowed in later types
- curch — a woman's plain cap or kerchief
- derth — (obsolete) dearth; scarcity.
- dhikr — a meeting of dervishes at which a phrase containing a name of God is chanted rhythmically to induce a state of ecstasy.
- dhrop — Eye dialect of drop.
- earsh — (archaic) stubble field.
- earth — (often initial capital letter) the planet third in order from the sun, having an equatorial diameter of 7926 miles (12,755 km) and a polar diameter of 7900 miles (12,714 km), a mean distance from the sun of 92.9 million miles (149.6 million km), and a period of revolution of 365.26 days, and having one satellite.
- ephor — (in ancient Greece) one of five senior Spartan magistrates.
- esher — a town in SE England, in NE Surrey near London: racecourse. Pop: 25 172 (2001)
- ether — A pleasant-smelling, colorless, volatile liquid that is highly flammable. It is used as an anesthetic and as a solvent or intermediate in industrial processes.
- farah — Sir Mo(hamed). born 1983, British long-distance runner, born in Somalia: winner of the 5000 metres and the 10,000 metres at the 2012 and 2016 Olympics
- farhi — Nicole. born 1946, French fashion designer based in Britain: married to Sir David Hare
- firth — John Rupert, 1890–1960, English linguist.
- forth — onward or outward in place or space; forward: to come forth; go forth.
- fresh — newly made or obtained: fresh footprints.
- frith — firth.
- frosh — a college or high-school freshman.
- froth — an aggregation of bubbles, as on an agitated liquid or at the mouth of a hard-driven horse; foam; spume.
- frush — (obsolete, transitive) To break up, smash.
- furth — a city in S Germany, near Nuremberg.