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

  • thereon — on or upon that or it.
  • thereto — to that place, thing, etc.
  • thermo- — Thermo- combines with adjectives to form adjectives that mean using or relating to heat.
  • thermos — a vacuum bottle or similar container lined with an insulating material, such as polystyrene, to keep liquids hot or cold.
  • theroid — of, relating to, or resembling a beast
  • theroux — Paul (Edward). born 1941, US novelist and travel writer. His novels include Picture Palace (1978), The Mosquito Coast (1981), and My Other Life (1996); travel writings include The Great Railway Bazaar (1975)
  • thjorsa — a river in central Iceland, flowing SW to the Atlantic Ocean. About 143 miles (230 km) long.
  • thoreauHenry David, 1817–62, U.S. naturalist and author.
  • thorite — a rare mineral, thorium silicate, ThSiO 4 , occurring in the form of yellow or black crystals.
  • thorium — a grayish-white, lustrous, somewhat ductile and malleable, radioactive metallic element present in monazite: used as a source of nuclear energy, as a coating on sun-lamp and vacuum-tube filament coatings, and in alloys. Symbol: Th; atomic weight: 232.038; atomic number: 90; specific gravity: 11.7.
  • thorned — a sharp excrescence on a plant, especially a sharp-pointed aborted branch; spine; prickle.
  • thorold — a city in SE Ontario, in S Canada.
  • thother — an archaic contraction of the other
  • throaty — produced or modified in the throat, as certain sounds; guttural, husky, or hoarse.
  • thrombi — a fibrinous clot that forms in and obstructs a blood vessel, or that forms in one of the chambers of the heart.
  • thronos — an ancient Greek chair, usually highly ornamented, having a high seat and back and rectangular turned or carved legs ending in animal feet.
  • through — in at one end, side, or surface and out at the other: to pass through a tunnel; We drove through Denver without stopping. Sun came through the window.
  • throwed — a simple past tense and past participle of throw.
  • thrower — a person or thing that throws.
  • thurlowEdward, 1st Baron, 1731–1806, British statesman: Lord Chancellor 1778–92.
  • thyroid — of or relating to the thyroid gland.
  • tinhorn — someone, especially a gambler, who pretends to be important but actually has little money, influence, or skill.
  • toheroa — a large marine clam, Amphidesma ventricosum, of waters near New Zealand.
  • toparch — the ruler of a small state or realm
  • torched — a light to be carried in the hand, consisting of some combustible substance, as resinous wood, or of twisted flax or the like soaked with tallow or other flammable substance, ignited at the upper end.
  • torcher — a person who gives light with a torch
  • torches — a light to be carried in the hand, consisting of some combustible substance, as resinous wood, or of twisted flax or the like soaked with tallow or other flammable substance, ignited at the upper end.
  • torgoch — a type of char or mountain trout
  • toryish — of, relating to, or resembling a Tory.
  • toucher — to put the hand, finger, etc., on or into contact with (something) to feel it: He touched the iron cautiously.
  • tougher — strong and durable; not easily broken or cut.
  • tricho- — indicating hair or a part resembling hair
  • trochal — resembling a wheel.
  • trochee — a foot of two syllables, a long followed by a short in quantitative meter, or a stressed followed by an unstressed in accentual meter. Symbol: .
  • troches — a small tablet or lozenge, usually a circular one, made of medicinal substance worked into a paste with sugar and mucilage or the like, and dried.
  • trochus — (in ancient Greece and Rome) a hoop or wheel, as used in play or exercise
  • trophic — of or relating to nutrition; concerned in nutritive processes.
  • tropho- — indicating nourishment or nutrition
  • unworth — a lack of value; unworthiness
  • upthrow — an upheaval, as of the earth's surface.
  • urolith — a urinary calculus.
  • warthog — an African wild swine, Phacochoerus aethiopicus, having large tusks and warty protuberances on the face.
  • whartonEdith, 1862–1937, U.S. novelist.
  • whereto — (archaic, interrogative) To what; to which place, whither?.
  • whortle — the whortleberry.
  • worthed — to happen or betide: woe worth the day.
  • worthen — (ambitransitive) To give worth to; value; make or become worth or worthy; appraise.
  • worthly — Having great worth or value; valuable; important; dignified; stately; excellent; worthy; deserving (of).
  • wotcher — (chiefly, British) A friendly greeting.
  • wrought — Archaic except in some senses. a simple past tense and past participle of work.
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