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6-letter words containing u, c, h

  • huckle — the hip or haunch.
  • huesca — a city in NE Spain: Roman town, site of Quintus Sertorius' school (76 bc); 15th-century cathedral and ancient palace of Aragonese kings. Pop: 47 609 (2003 est)
  • humect — to moisten, to wet
  • jochum — Eugen (ˈɔyɡeːn). 1902–87, German orchestral conductor
  • kechua — Quechua.
  • krutchJoseph Wood, 1893–1970, U.S. critic, biographer, naturalist, and teacher.
  • kuchen — a yeast-raised coffeecake, often containing fruit.
  • kulich — a sweetened, dome-shaped yeast bread, rich in butter and eggs and also containing raisins and topped with a sugar icing: traditionally made at Easter and served with paskha.
  • kutcha — crude, imperfect, or temporary.
  • launch — to set (a boat or ship) in the water.
  • lochus — (in ancient Greece) a subdivision of an army.
  • louche — dubious; shady; disreputable.
  • luchot — engraved tablets of stone
  • luchou — a city in S Sichuan province, in central China, on the Chang Jiang.
  • luchow — Luzhou.
  • lunchy — stupid; dull-witted.
  • manchu — a member of a Tungusic people of Manchuria who conquered China in the 17th century and established a dynasty there (Manchu dynasty, or Ch'ing, 1644–1912).
  • maunch — manche.
  • menchu — Rigoberta [ree-guh-ber-tuh] /ˌri gəˈbɛr tə/ (Show IPA), born 1959, Guatemalan author and social reformer: Nobel prize 1992.
  • muches — great in quantity, measure, or degree: too much cake.
  • muchly — (colloquial) very much, very.
  • mulchy — Resembling or characteristic of mulch.
  • munchy — crunchy or chewy. Informal. for snacking: munchy foods like popcorn and cookies.
  • munich — a state in SE Germany: formerly a kingdom. 27,239 sq. mi. (70,550 sq. km). Capital: Munich.
  • nautch — (in India) an exhibition of dancing by professional dancing girls.
  • nuchae — nape.
  • nuchal — Of or relating to the nape of the neck.
  • ouched — a clasp, buckle, or brooch, especially one worn for ornament.
  • ouches — a clasp, buckle, or brooch, especially one worn for ornament.
  • paunch — a large and protruding belly; potbelly.
  • phocus — An object-oriented Prolog-like language.
  • pouchy — possessing or resembling a pouch: pouchy folds under the eyes.
  • punchy — punch-drunk.
  • putsch — a plotted revolt or attempt to overthrow a government, especially one that depends upon suddenness and speed.
  • quaich — a Scottish drinking cup of the 17th and 18th centuries having a shallow bowl with two or three flat handles.
  • quatch — a sound
  • queach — a thicket
  • quench — to slake, satisfy, or allay (thirst, desires, passion, etc.).
  • quetch — Alternative form of quitch.
  • quiche — a Mayan language of Guatemala.
  • quitch — couch grass.
  • raunch — smuttiness or vulgarity; crudeness; obscenity: porno magazines and other purveyors of raunch.
  • ruched — a strip of pleated lace, net, muslin, or other material for trimming or finishing a dress, as at the collar or sleeves.
  • schlub — zhlob.
  • schout — (formerly) a council officer or sheriff in the Netherlands
  • schtup — to have sexual intercourse with.
  • schuit — a Dutch boat with a flat bottom
  • schuln — shul.
  • schulz — Charles M(onroe) 1922–2000, U.S. cartoonist: creator of the comic strip “Peanuts.”.
  • schurzCarl, 1829–1906, U.S. general, statesman, and newspaperman; born in Germany.
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