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9-letter words containing t, h, e, c

  • teacherly — characteristic of or pertaining to a teacher; pedagogic.
  • teachings — the act or profession of a person who teaches.
  • teachless — without teaching
  • technical — belonging or pertaining to an art, science, or the like: technical skill.
  • technikon — a technical college
  • technique — the manner and ability with which an artist, writer, dancer, athlete, or the like employs the technical skills of a particular art or field of endeavor.
  • technopop — synthpop.
  • tehuelche — a member of an Indian people of Patagonia.
  • telestich — a poem in which the last letters of successive lines form a word, a phrase, or the consecutive letters of the alphabet.
  • ter borch — Gerard [kh-ey-rahrt] /xˈeɪ rɑrt/ (Show IPA), 1617–81, Dutch painter.
  • tetrarchy — any ruler of a fourth part, division, etc.
  • thackeray — William Makepeace [meyk-pees] /ˈmeɪkˌpis/ (Show IPA), 1811–63, English novelist, born in India.
  • the backs — the grounds between the River Cam and certain Cambridge colleges
  • the bench — a judge or magistrate sitting in court in a judicial capacity
  • the birch — a bundle of birch twigs or a birch rod used, esp formerly, for flogging offenders
  • the boche — Germans collectively, esp German soldiers regarded as the enemy
  • the cabal — a group of ministers of Charles II that governed from 1667–73: consisting of Clifford, Ashley, Buckingham, Arlington, and Lauderdale
  • the chase — the act or sport of hunting
  • the chuck — dismissal
  • the cloth — the clothes worn by a clergyman
  • the coast — in the U.S., the Pacific coast
  • the creed — the Apostles' Creed
  • the cross — the cross on which Jesus was put to death
  • the crowd — the common people; the masses
  • the curse — menstruation or a menstrual period
  • the cutes — cute mannerisms, ploys, devices, etc. designed to charm or attract others
  • the deuce — used in such phrases as what the deuce, where the deuce, etc
  • the ditch — an informal name for the Tasman Sea
  • the docks — the area around a wharf or pier, used for the mooring, loading, unloading, and repair of ships
  • the dutch — the natives, citizens, or inhabitants of the Netherlands
  • the elect — persons belonging to a specially privileged group
  • the fancy — those who follow a particular sport, esp prize fighting
  • the force — A data parallel language by Harry Jordan <[email protected]> which extends Fortran for shared memory multiprocessors. It features parallel "case" statements and critical sections.
  • the minch — a channel of the Atlantic divided into the North Minch between the mainland of Scotland and the Isle of Lewis, and the Little Minch between the Isle of Skye and Harris and North Uist
  • the pinch — sharp, painful, or extreme stress, need, etc
  • the races — a series of contests of speed between horses (or sometimes greyhounds) over a set course at prearranged times; a race meeting
  • the score — the actual situation; the true facts
  • the scrub — a remote place, esp one where contact with people can be avoided
  • the thick — the busiest or most intense part
  • the which — a longer form of which, often used as a sentence connector
  • the-cenci — a verse tragedy (1819) by Shelley.
  • theaceous — belonging to the Theaceae, the tea family of plants.
  • theandric — relating to the state of being both divine and human, esp pertaining to Christ
  • theatrics — (used with a singular verb) the art of staging plays and other stage performances.
  • thecodont — any of various reptiles of the extinct order Thecodontia, occurring in the late Permian to late Triassic periods and characterized by teeth set in sockets.
  • theocracy — a form of government in which God or a deity is recognized as the supreme civil ruler, the God's or deity's laws being interpreted by the ecclesiastical authorities.
  • theocrasy — a mixture of religious forms and deities by worshipers.
  • theodoric — a.d. 454?–526, king of the Ostrogoths and founder of the Ostrogothic monarchy in Italy: ruler of Italy 493–526.
  • theologic — of, relating to, or involved with theology: a theological student.
  • theomachy — a battle with or among the gods.
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