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7-letter words containing t, h

  • athrill — excited or thrilled
  • athwart — transversely; from one side to another
  • atishoo — Atishoo is used, especially in writing, to represent the sound that you make when you sneeze.
  • atrophy — If a muscle or other part of the body atrophies, it decreases in size or strength, often as a result of an illness.
  • attache — An attaché is a member of staff in an embassy, usually with a special responsibility for something.
  • aughter — to own; possess.
  • autarch — an absolute ruler
  • authors — a person who writes a novel, poem, essay, etc.; the composer of a literary work, as distinguished from a compiler, translator, editor, or copyist.
  • authour — Obsolete spelling of author.
  • awright — (slang, informal) Okay; indication of approval. Variant colloquial form of \"all right\". Sometimes \"awight\" or \"ah'ight\".
  • ayuthea — a city in central Thailand, on the Chao Phraya: former national capital.
  • azimuth — the angular distance usually measured clockwise from the north point of the horizon to the intersection with the horizon of the vertical circle passing through a celestial body
  • bachata — a type of dance music originating in the Dominican Republic
  • bagatha — Bigtha.
  • bagehot — Walter. 1826–77, English economist and journalist: editor of The Economist; author of The English Constitution (1867), Physics and Politics (1872), and Lombard Street (1873)
  • bakhmut — former name of Artemovsk.
  • bakhtin — ˌMikhaˈil (ˌmixɑˈil) ; mēˌkhäēlˈ) 1895-1975; Russ. literary critic & theoretician
  • balthus — real name Balthasar Klossowski de Rola. 1908–2001, French painter of Polish descent, noted esp for his paintings of adolescent girls
  • barthes — Roland. 1915–80, French writer and critic, who applied structuralist theory to literature and popular culture: his books include Mythologies (1957) and Elements of Semiology (1964)
  • barthou — (Jean) Louis [zhahn lwee] /ʒɑ̃ lwi/ (Show IPA), 1862–1934, French statesman and author.
  • bashtag — (on the Twitter website) a hashtag that is used for critical and abusive comments
  • basotho — a member of the subgroup of the Sotho people who chiefly inhabit Lesotho
  • batched — a quantity or number coming at one time or taken together: a batch of prisoners.
  • batcher — anything that makes something into batches
  • batches — a quantity or number coming at one time or taken together: a batch of prisoners.
  • batfish — any angler of the family Ogcocephalidae, having a flattened scaleless body and moving on the sea floor by means of fleshy pectoral and pelvic fins
  • bathers — a swimming costume
  • bathing — swimming
  • bathmat — A bathmat is a mat which you stand on while you dry yourself after getting out of the bath.
  • bathmic — relating to bathmism
  • bathtub — A bathtub is a long, usually rectangular container which you fill with water and sit in to wash your body.
  • bathyal — denoting or relating to an ocean depth of between 200 and 2000 metres (about 100 and 1000 fathoms), corresponding to the continental slope
  • batshit — Completely mad or crazy.
  • bazatha — Biztha.
  • beareth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bear.
  • bedight — to array or adorn
  • behight — a vow or promise
  • bemouth — to praise a person dramatically
  • beneath — Something that is beneath another thing is under the other thing.
  • benight — to shroud in physical, moral, or intellectual darkness
  • bentham — Jeremy. 1748–1832, British philosopher and jurist: a founder of utilitarianism. His works include A Fragment on Government (1776) and Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation (1789)
  • benthic — of or relating to a benthos.
  • benthon — the aggregate of organisms that live on or in the benthos.
  • benthos — the animals and plants living at the bottom of a sea or lake
  • beothuk — a member of an extinct Native Canadian people formerly living in Newfoundland
  • berchta — Perchta.
  • berthed — in a berth
  • beshout — to shout at or about
  • bethank — to thank
  • bethany — a village in the West Bank, near Jerusalem at the foot of the Mount of Olives: in the New Testament, the home of Lazarus and the lodging place of Jesus during Holy Week
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