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8-letter words containing t, e, r, h

  • etherish — resembling ether
  • etherism — an addiction to ether
  • etherist — a person who administers ether
  • etherize — Anesthetize (a person or animal) with ether.
  • ethernet — Alternative capitalization of Ethernet.
  • ethnarch — (historical, Ancient Greece) The governor of a province or people.
  • ethogram — a description of an animal's behaviour
  • eurybath — an aquatic organism that can live at different depths
  • eurythmy — The harmony of features and proportion in architecture.
  • eutrophy — (medicine) healthy nutrition.
  • exahertz — A unit of measurement based on one quintillion hertz.
  • exhorted — Simple past tense and past participle of exhort.
  • exhorter — (rare) A person who exhorts.
  • exotherm — (chemistry) Any exothermic compound.
  • farfetch — (obsolete) Anything brought from afar, or brought about with studious care; a deep stratagem.
  • farthest — being at a great distance; remote in time or place: a far country; the far future.
  • fathered — a male parent.
  • fatherly — of, like, or befitting a father.
  • feathers — an apparatus for splitting stone, consisting of two tapered bars (feathers) inserted into a hole drilled into the stone, between which a narrow wedge (plug) is hammered to spread them.
  • feathery — clothed or covered with feathers; feathered.
  • fetchers — to go and bring back; return with; get: to go up a hill to fetch a pail of water.
  • fighters — Plural form of fighter.
  • filthier — Comparative form of filthy.
  • fire hat — a helmet worn by a firefighter as a defense against falling materials from burning structures.
  • flahertyRobert Joseph, 1884–1951, U.S. pioneer in the production of documentary motion pictures.
  • fletcherJohn, 1579–1625, English dramatist: collaborated with Francis Beaumont 1606?–16; with Philip Massinger 1613–25.
  • flichter — (of birds) to fly feebly; flutter.
  • flighter — (of birds) to fly feebly; flutter.
  • forehent — to seize in advance
  • foreshot — The spirits that first come over when an alcoholic liquid is distilled.
  • forsythe — A descendent of Algol 60, intended to be as uniform and general as possible, while retaining the basic character of its progenitor. Forsythe features higher-order procedures and intersection types.
  • fortieth — next after the thirty-ninth; being the ordinal number for 40.
  • free hit — in certain forms of cricket, esp one-day internationals, after the bowler has bowled a no-ball, a chance for a batsman to strike a ball without the possibility of being caught out
  • freights — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of freight.
  • freshest — newly made or obtained: fresh footprints.
  • freshets — Plural form of freshet.
  • frighted — Simple past tense and past participle of fright.
  • frighten — to make afraid or fearful; throw into a fright; terrify; scare.
  • frothery — an insubstantial thing; a triviality
  • frothier — Comparative form of frothy.
  • furthers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of further.
  • furthest — at or to a great distance; a long way off; at or to a remote point: We sailed far ahead of the fleet.
  • gathered — Simple past tense and past participle of gather.
  • gatherer — to bring together into one group, collection, or place: to gather firewood; to gather the troops.
  • geotherm — a line or surface within or on the earth connecting points of equal temperature
  • ghiberti — Lorenzo [law-ren-tsaw] /lɔˈrɛn tsɔ/ (Show IPA), 1378–1455, Florentine sculptor, goldsmith, and painter.
  • goatherd — a person who tends goats.
  • graphite — a very common mineral, soft native carbon, occurring in black to dark-gray foliated masses, with metallic luster and greasy feel: used for pencil leads, as a lubricant, and for making crucibles and other refractories; plumbago; black lead.
  • gretchen — a female given name, form of Margaret.
  • groaneth — Archaic third-person singular form of groan.
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