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7-letter words containing t, h, c

  • clothed — If you are clothed in a certain way, you are dressed in that way.
  • clothes — Clothes are the things that people wear, such as shirts, coats, trousers, and dresses.
  • clutchy — (of a person) tending to cling
  • co-host — a person who co-hosts.
  • cohabit — If two people are cohabiting, they are living together and have a sexual relationship, but are not married.
  • cohibit — to restrain (a person)
  • cohorts — Plural form of cohort.
  • colbathJeremiah Jones, Wilson, Henry.
  • coltish — A young person or animal that is coltish is full of energy but clumsy or awkward, because they lack physical skill or control.
  • commeth — (obsolete) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of come.
  • corinth — a port in S Greece, in the NE Peloponnese: the modern town is near the site of the ancient city, the largest and richest of the city-states after Athens. Pop (municipality): 36 991 (2001)
  • cothurn — A buskin anciently worn by tragic actors on the stage.
  • couther — known or acquainted with.
  • couthie — sociable; friendly; congenial
  • cowitch — a tropical vine, Mucuna pruriens, of the legume family, bearing reddish or blackish pods.
  • crathur — (Ireland, obsolete) creature.
  • crochet — Crochet is a way of making cloth out of cotton or wool by using a needle with a small hook at the end.
  • cthonic — Alternative spelling of chthonic.
  • cultish — intended to appeal to a small group of fashionable people
  • cumshot — (vulgar, slang) A sex act in pornographic films in which a man ejaculates onto his partner's body.
  • cushats — Plural form of cushat.
  • cyathus — an ancient measure of wine equivalent to approximately one twelfth of a pint
  • cynthia — a feminine name: dim. Cindy
  • cythera — a Greek island off the SE coast of the Peloponnese: in ancient times a centre of the worship of Aphrodite. Pop: 3354 (2001). Area: about 285 sq km (110 sq miles)
  • deutsch — Otto Erich (ˈɔto ˈeːrɪç). 1883–1967, Austrian music historian and art critic, noted for his catalogue of Schubert's works (1951)
  • diptych — a hinged two-leaved tablet used in ancient times for writing on with a stylus.
  • distich — a unit of two lines of verse, usually a self-contained statement; couplet.
  • ditched — a long, narrow excavation made in the ground by digging, as for draining or irrigating land; trench.
  • ditcher — a person who digs ditches.
  • ditches — Plural form of ditch.
  • dontcha — Eye dialect of don't you.
  • dutches — of, relating to, or characteristic of the natives or inhabitants of the Netherlands or their country or language.
  • eckhart — Johannes [yoh-hah-nuh s] /yoʊˈhɑ nəs/ (Show IPA), ("Meister Eckhart") c1260–1327? Dominican theologian and preacher: founder of German mysticism.
  • ecthyma — a contagious viral disease of sheep and goats and occasionally of humans, marked by vesicular and pustular lesions on the lips.
  • enchant — Fill (someone) with great delight; charm.
  • erethic — (pathology) Being abnormally excited.
  • escheat — The reversion of property to the state, or (in feudal law) to a lord, on the owner’s dying without legal heirs.
  • estrich — ostrich
  • etchant — An acid or corrosive chemical used in etching; a mordant.
  • etching — A print produced by the process of etching.
  • ethenic — (chemistry) Pertaining to, derived from, or resembling ethene or ethylene.
  • etheric — Of or pertaining to the ether (all-pervading medium).
  • ethical — Of or relating to moral principles or the branch of knowledge dealing with these.
  • ethnica — Plural form of ethnicon.
  • ethnics — Plural form of ethnic.
  • ethylic — (organic chemistry) Pertaining to, derived from, or containing ethyl.
  • fetched — damned: Jim beat up every fetched one of them.
  • fetcher — to go and bring back; return with; get: to go up a hill to fetch a pail of water.
  • fetches — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of fetch.
  • fitches — the European polecat, Mustela putorius.
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