7-letter words containing t, h, u
- tonghua — a city in SE Jilin province, in NE China.
- touched — moved; stirred: They were very touched by your generosity.
- toucher — to put the hand, finger, etc., on or into contact with (something) to feel it: He touched the iron cautiously.
- touchup — (of a painting etc) a renovation or retouching
- toughen — reinforce, strengthen
- tougher — strong and durable; not easily broken or cut.
- toughie — a tough person, especially one who is belligerent.
- toughly — strong and durable; not easily broken or cut.
- triumph — the act, fact, or condition of being victorious or triumphant; victory; conquest.
- trochus — (in ancient Greece and Rome) a hoop or wheel, as used in play or exercise
- truther — a person who does not believe the official account of the 9/11 attacks on the US and who seeks to uncover the ‘truth’ about the events of that day
- tubbish — rather fat or shaped like a tub
- tuchman — Barbara (Wertheim) [wurt-hahym] /ˈwɜrt haɪm/ (Show IPA), 1912–1989, U.S. historian and writer.
- tukhrik — an aluminum-bronze or cupronickel coin and monetary unit of the Mongolian People's Republic, equal to 100 mongo.
- tulchan — the skin of a calf placed next to a cow to induce it to give milk
- tumshie — a turnip
- tundish — (in a vacuum induction furnace) a trough through which molten metal flows under vacuum to a mold chamber.
- tunghwa — Tonghua.
- turkish — of, pertaining to, characteristic of, or derived from Turkey or the Turks.
- turpeth — the root of an East Indian plant, Merremia (or Operculina) turpethum, of the morning glory family, formerly used as a purgative.
- tushery — the use of affectedly archaic language in novels, etc
- tushies — the buttocks.
- typhous — an acute, infectious disease caused by several species of Rickettsia, transmitted by lice and fleas, and characterized by acute prostration, headache, and a peculiar eruption of reddish spots on the body.
- u thant — U, U Thant.
- unberth — Nautical. to allot to (a vessel) a certain space at which to anchor or tie up. to bring to or install in a berth, anchorage, or moorage: The captain had to berth the ship without the aid of tugboats.
- uncouth — awkward, clumsy, or unmannerly: uncouth behavior; an uncouth relative who embarrasses the family.
- undight — to remove or take off (clothing)
- unearth — to dig or get out of the earth; dig up.
- unfaith — lack of faith, especially religious faith; unbelief.
- ungirth — to release (a horse) from a girth
- unhasty — not speedy
- unheart — to discourage
- unhitch — to free from attachment; unfasten: to unhitch a locomotive from a train.
- unlatch — to unfasten (a door, window shutter, etc.) by lifting the latch.
- unright — a wrong
- unshent — undamaged
- unshift — to release the shift key, as on a typewriter or the keyboard of a computer terminal.
- unshout — to revoke (an earlier statement) by shouting a contrary one
- unsight — without inspection or examination: to buy a thing unsight, unseen.
- unteach — to cause to be forgotten or disbelieved, as by contrary teaching.
- unthink — to end one's thought or reverse the process of thought.
- untruth — the state or character of being untrue.
- unwhite — not white; no longer white
- unwitch — to release from a witch or from witchcraft
- unworth — a lack of value; unworthiness
- up with — wanting the beginning or continuation of
- upcatch — to catch up (with); to arrive at the same point as
- uphoist — to raise or hoist upwards
- uplight — a lamp, often a light bulb set in a cylinder or other container, placed on the floor so that a beam of light is directed upward.
- upright — erect or vertical, as in position or posture.