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7-letter words containing t, h, r, a

  • charret — (obsolete) A chariot.
  • charted — a sheet exhibiting information in tabular form.
  • charter — A charter is a formal document describing the rights, aims, or principles of an organization or group of people.
  • charvet — a soft, lusterless silk or rayon tie fabric, often made with a faint stripe effect.
  • chaster — refraining from sexual intercourse that is regarded as contrary to morality or religion; virtuous.
  • chatter — If you chatter, you talk quickly and continuously, usually about things which are not important.
  • cheater — A cheater is someone who cheats.
  • cithara — a stringed musical instrument of ancient Greece and elsewhere, similar to the lyre and played with a plectrum
  • crathur — (Ireland, obsolete) creature.
  • 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)
  • dearths — Plural form of dearth.
  • draught — a drawing, sketch, or design.
  • earhart — Amelia (Mary) 1897–1937, U.S. aviator: vanished in flight over Pacific Ocean.
  • earshot — the range or distance within which a sound, voice, etc., can be heard.
  • earthed — (British) Grounded, connected electrically to the ground.
  • earthen — composed of earth.
  • earthly — of or relating to the earth, especially as opposed to heaven; worldly.
  • eckhart — Johannes [yoh-hah-nuh s] /yoʊˈhɑ nəs/ (Show IPA), ("Meister Eckhart") c1260–1327? Dominican theologian and preacher: founder of German mysticism.
  • enthral — (transitive) To hold spellbound; to bewitch, charm or captivate.
  • erathem — the stratum of rocks representing a specific geological era
  • farther — at or to a great distance; a long way off; at or to a remote point: We sailed far ahead of the fleet.
  • fathers — Plural form of father.
  • feather — one of the horny structures forming the principal covering of birds, consisting typically of a hard, tubular portion attached to the body and tapering into a thinner, stemlike portion bearing a series of slender, barbed processes that interlock to form a flat structure on each side.
  • fraught — Archaic. filled or laden (with): ships fraught with precious wares.
  • futhark — the runic alphabet.
  • gathers — Plural form of gather.
  • gertcha — get out of here!
  • granthi — the caretaker of a gurdwara and the reader of the Guru Granth, who officiates at Sikh ceremonies
  • gytrash — a spirit appearing as a horse or a dog that haunts lonely roads
  • haftara — haphtara
  • haggart — (Irish, dated) a farmyard or small enclosed field; a vegetable patch or kitchen garden.
  • haircut — an act or instance of cutting the hair.
  • hairnet — a cap of loose net, as of silk or nylon, for holding the hair in place.
  • halbert — (weapons) An ancient long-handled weapon, of which the head had a point and several long, sharp edges, curved or straight, and sometimes additional points. The heads were sometimes of very elaborate form.
  • haltere — (entomology) A small knobbed structure in some two-winged insects, one of a pair that are flapped rapidly and function as accelerometers to maintain stability in flight.
  • halters — Plural form of halter.
  • hamster — any of several short-tailed, stout-bodied, burrowing rodents, as Cricetus cricetus, of Europe and Asia, having large cheek pouches.
  • haptera — a structure by which a fungus, aquatic plant, or algae colony attaches to an object; a holdfast.
  • hardest — not soft; solid and firm to the touch; unyielding to pressure and impenetrable or almost impenetrable.
  • hardhat — a construction worker, especially a member of a construction workers' union.
  • hardtop — a style of car having a rigid metal top and no center posts between windows.
  • haricot — a stew of lamb or mutton with turnips and potatoes.
  • harlots — Plural form of harlot.
  • harmest — (archaic) Archaic second-person singular form of harm.
  • harmost — a person serving the ancient Spartans as governor of a subject or conquered town.
  • harnettWilliam Michael, 1848–92, U.S. painter.
  • haroset — a mixture of chopped nuts and apples, wine, and spices that is eaten at the Seder meal on Passover: traditionally regarded as symbolic of the mortar used by Israelite slaves in Egypt.
  • harpist — a person who plays the harp, especially professionally.
  • harriet — a female given name, form of Harry.
  • harslet — Chiefly Southern U.S. haslet.
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