9-letter words containing t, h, r, a
- crash-hot — extremely impressive
- cryolathe — an instrument for reshaping the cornea to correct severe nearsightedness or farsightedness: the cornea is removed from the eye, rapidly frozen, reshaped, and reinserted.
- cutthroat — a person who cuts throats; murderer
- cyberchat — Chat that takes place on the Internet, as in a chatroom or via instant messages.
- cytherean — of or relating to Cytherea.
- dankworth — Sir John (Philip William). 1927–2010, British jazz composer, bandleader, and saxophonist: married to Cleo Laine
- dartmouth — a port in SW England, in S Devon: Royal Naval College (1905). Pop: 5512 (2001)
- daughters — Plural form of daughter.
- dearheart — A term of affection.
- death ray — an imaginary ray capable of killing
- death row — If someone is on death row, they are in the part of a prison which contains the cells for criminals who have been sentenced to death.
- deathtrap — If you say that a place or vehicle is a deathtrap, you mean it is in such bad condition that it might cause someone's death.
- deathward — having an inclination or disposition towards death
- declareth — (archaic) Third-person singular present simple form of 'declare'.
- dehydrate — When something such as food is dehydrated, all the water is removed from it, often in order to preserve it.
- departeth — (archaic) Third-person singular present simple form of 'depart'.
- diathermy — local heating of the body tissues with an electric current for medical or surgical purposes
- dichromat — a person whose vision can only distinguish two colours
- dihydrate — a hydrate that contains two molecules of water, as potassium sulfite, K 2 SO 3 ⋅2H 2 O.
- dishwater — water in which dishes are, or have been, washed.
- dithyramb — a Greek choral song or chant of vehement or wild character and of usually irregular form, originally in honor of Dionysus or Bacchus.
- drag hunt — drag (def 27c).
- drahthaar — one of a German breed of wirehaired pointing dogs.
- dratchell — a scruffy woman; a slut; a drab
- draughted — a drawing, sketch, or design.
- draughter — a drawing, sketch, or design.
- draw shot — a stroke that imparts a backward spin to the cue ball, causing it to roll back after striking the object ball. Compare follow shot (def 2).
- drawsheet — a narrow sheet, often used on hospital beds, placed under a patient's buttocks and often over a rubber sheet, that can easily be removed if soiled.
- eachother — (nonstandard) misspelling of each other Typically used in the context of
- earth 2.0 — a planet whose size and atmospheric conditions resemble those of the Earth
- earth art — the artistic genre consisting of earthworks.
- earth day — environmental awareness day
- earth-god — a god of fertility and vegetation.
- earthborn — born on or sprung from the earth; of earthly origin.
- earthfall — a fall of earth or a landslide
- earthfast — relating to a method of building or to buildings that have no foundations but are supported by posts knocked into the ground
- earthlike — Of a planet, resembling the Earth.
- earthling — an inhabitant of earth; mortal.
- earthrise — the rising of the earth above the horizon of the moon or other celestial body, viewed from that body's surface or from a spacecraft orbiting it.
- earthstar — a fungus of the genus Geaster, having an outer covering that splits into the form of a star.
- earthward — Also, earthwards. toward the earth.
- earthwork — excavation and piling of earth in connection with an engineering operation.
- earthworm — any one of numerous annelid worms that burrow in soil and feed on soil nutrients and decaying organic matter.
- embreathe — to breathe in (air)
- enchanter — A person who uses magic or sorcery, esp. to put someone or something under a spell.
- enhearten — To comfort and embolden, encourage, animate, hearten.
- enthraled — (rare) Simple past tense and past participle of enthral.
- enthralls — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of enthrall.
- entrechat — A vertical jump during which the dancer repeatedly crosses the feet and beats them together.
- enwreathe — Surround or envelop (something).