6-letter words containing t, e, r, h
- reheat — the state of a body perceived as having or generating a relatively high degree of warmth.
- rheita — a crater in the fourth quadrant of the face of the moon: about 42 miles (68 km) in diameter.
- rhetor — a master or teacher of rhetoric.
- rheydt — a city in W Germany, adjacent to Mönchen-Gladbach. 96,000 (1963).
- richet — Charles Robert [sharl raw-ber] /ʃarl rɔˈbɛr/ (Show IPA), 1850–1935, French physician: Nobel prize 1913.
- rochet — a vestment of linen or lawn, resembling a surplice, worn especially by bishops and abbots.
- rotche — dovekie
- sarthe — a department in NW France. 2411 sq. mi. (6245 sq. km). Capital: Le Mans.
- sather — (language) /Say-ther/ (Named after the Sather Tower at UCB, as opposed to the Eiffel Tower). An interactive object-oriented language designed by Steve M. Omohundro at ICSI in 1991. Sather has simple syntax, similar to Eiffel, but it is non-proprietary and faster. Sather 0.2 was nearly a subset of Eiffel 2.0, but Sather 1.0 adds many distinctive features: parameterised classes, multiple inheritance, statically-checked strong typing, garbage collection. The compiler generates C as an intermediate language. There are versions for most workstations. Sather attempts to retain much of Eiffel's theoretical cleanliness and simplicity while achieving the efficiency of C++. The compiler generates efficient and portable C code which is easily integrated with existing code. A variety of development tools including a debugger and browser based on gdb and a GNU Emacs development environment have also been written. There is also a class library with several hundred classes that implement a variety of basic data structures and numerical, geometric, connectionist, statistical, and graphical abstractions. The authors would like to encourage contributions to the library and hope to build a large collection of efficient, well-written, well-tested classes in a variety of areas of computer science. Sather runs on Sun-4, HP9000/300, Decstation 5000, MIPS, Sony News 3000, Sequent/Dynix, SCO SysVR3.2, NeXT, Linux. See also dpSather, pSather, Sather-K. E-mail: <[email protected]>. Mailing list: [email protected]
- sereth — German name of Siret.
- sharet — Moshe [maw-she] /mɔˈʃɛ/ (Show IPA), (Moshe Shertok) 1894–1965, Israeli statesman, born in Russia: prime minister 1953–55.
- tehran — a city in and the capital of Iran, in the N part: wartime conference of Roosevelt, Churchill, and Stalin 1943.
- tephra — clastic volcanic material, as scoria, dust, etc., ejected during an eruption.
- teraph — any of various small household gods or images venerated by ancient Semitic peoples. (Genesis 31:19–21; I Samuel 19:13–16)
- tether — a rope, chain, or the like, by which an animal is fastened to a fixed object so as to limit its range of movement.
- thaler — any of various former large coins of various German states; dollar.
- thayer — Sylvanus, 1785–1872, U.S. army officer and educator.
- theirs — any male person or animal; a man: hes and shes.
- thenar — the fleshy mass of the outer side of the palm of the hand.
- theory — a coherent group of tested general propositions, commonly regarded as correct, that can be used as principles of explanation and prediction for a class of phenomena: Einstein's theory of relativity. Synonyms: principle, law, doctrine.
- therer — in or at that place (opposed to here): She is there now.
- theres — in or at that place (opposed to here): She is there now.
- therma — ancient name of Salonika.
- therme — any of several units of heat, as one equivalent to 1000 large calories or 100,000 British thermal units.
- thermo — Thermo means using or relating to heat.
- theron — Charlize (ˈʃɑːlɪːz) born 1975, South African film actress; her films include The Cider House Rules (1999) and Monster (2003), which earned her an Academy Award
- thiers — Louis Adolphe [lwee a-dawlf] /lwi aˈdɔlf/ (Show IPA), 1797–1877, French statesman: president 1871–73.
- thorez — Maurice [maw-rees] /mɔˈris/ (Show IPA), 1900–64, French Communist Party leader.
- thorpe — a hamlet; village.
- thrace — an ancient region of varying extent in the E part of the Balkan Peninsula: later a Roman province; now in Bulgaria, Turkey, and Greece.
- thrale — Hester Lynch (Hester Lynch Piozzi) 1741–1821, Welsh writer and friend of Samuel Johnson.
- thrave — twenty-four sheaves of corn
- thread — a fine cord of flax, cotton, or other fibrous material spun out to considerable length, especially when composed of two or more filaments twisted together.
- threap — an argument; quarrel.
- threat — a declaration of an intention or determination to inflict punishment, injury, etc., in retaliation for, or conditionally upon, some action or course; menace: He confessed under the threat of imprisonment.
- thresh — to separate the grain or seeds from (a cereal plant or the like) by some mechanical means, as by beating with a flail or by the action of a threshing machine.
- thrice — three times, as in succession; on three occasions or in three ways.
- thrive — to prosper; be fortunate or successful.
- throes — a violent spasm or pang; paroxysm.
- throne — the chair or seat occupied by a sovereign, bishop, or other exalted personage on ceremonial occasions, usually raised on a dais and covered with a canopy.
- throve — a simple past tense of thrive.
- thyrse — a compact branching inflorescence, as of the lilac, in which the main axis is indeterminate and the lateral axes are determinate.
- tither — a person who gives or pays tithes, as to a church.
- tocher — a dowry; marriage settlement given to the groom by the bride or her family.
- tosher — a person who scavenged in the sewers in Victorian London
- tother — the other
- trench — Richard Chenevix [shen-uh-vee] /ˈʃɛn ə vi/ (Show IPA), 1807–86, English clergyman and scholar, born in Ireland.
- troche — a small tablet or lozenge, usually a circular one, made of medicinal substance worked into a paste with sugar and mucilage or the like, and dried.
- wether — a castrated male sheep.
- whater — the true nature or identity of something, or the sum of its characteristics: a lecture on the whats and hows of crop rotation.