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

  • chartres — a city in NW France: Gothic cathedral; market town. Pop: 41 588 (2006)
  • 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.
  • cheaters — eyeglasses, esp. dark glasses
  • cheatery — the act of cheating or deceiving
  • chelator — an organic chemical that bonds with metal ions and produces a chelate compound
  • chlorate — any salt of chloric acid, containing the monovalent ion ClO3–
  • chordate — any animal of the phylum Chordata, including the vertebrates and protochordates, characterized by a notochord, dorsal tubular nerve cord, and pharyngeal gill slits
  • chromate — any salt or ester of chromic acid. Simple chromate salts contain the divalent ion, CrO42–, and are orange
  • cratches — a crib for fodder; manger.
  • cytherea — Aphrodite
  • daughter — Someone's daughter is their female child.
  • detacher — One who or that which detaches.
  • disheart — Obsolete form of dishearten.
  • dorothea — a female given name: from a Greek word meaning “gift of God.”.
  • dpsather — Data-parallel Sather. deterministic fine-grained parallelism. E-mail: <[email protected]>. ftp://lynx.csis.dit.csiro.au/p/pub/ather/dpsather.papers.
  • earth up — to cover (part of a plant, esp the stem) with soil in order to protect from frost, light, etc
  • earthier — Comparative form of earthy.
  • earthily — In an earthy manner.
  • earthing — (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.
  • earthman — a human inhabitant or native of the planet Earth.
  • earthmen — Plural form of earthman.
  • earthnut — any of various roots, tubers, or underground growths, as the peanut and the truffle.
  • earthpea — the peanut.
  • earthset — the apparent setting of the earth below the lunar horizon, as seen from a satellite or similar spacecraft emerging from the far side of the moon
  • eberhartRichard, 1904–2005, U.S. poet.
  • enthrall — Capture the fascinated attention of.
  • enthrals — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of enthral.
  • enwreath — Misspelling of enwreathe.
  • ephorate — The office of an ephor; ephors collectively.
  • erythema — Superficial reddening of the skin, usually in patches, as a result of injury or irritation causing dilatation of the blood capillaries.
  • ethercap — a spider
  • ethereal — Extremely delicate and light in a way that seems too perfect for this world.
  • etherial — Archaic form of ethereal.
  • 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
  • exahertz — A unit of measurement based on one quintillion hertz.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • goatherd — a person who tends goats.
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