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4-letter words containing ch

  • chou — a type of cabbage
  • chow — Food can be referred to as chow.
  • chrp — PowerPC Platform
  • chub — a common European freshwater cyprinid game fish, Leuciscus (or Squalius) cephalus, having a cylindrical dark greenish body
  • chug — When a vehicle chugs somewhere, it goes there slowly, noisily and with difficulty.
  • chum — Your chum is your friend.
  • chup — Be quiet!.
  • chur — an informal expression of agreement
  • chut — an expression of surprise, impatience, or annoyance
  • coch — a spoonful
  • cuch — CUrry-CHurch.
  • dich — may it do
  • each — every one of two or more considered individually or one by one: each stone in a building; a hallway with a door at each end.
  • eche — (obsolete) Eternal; everlasting.
  • echo — a repetition of sound produced by the reflection of sound waves from a wall, mountain, or other obstructing surface.
  • echt — real; authentic; genuine.
  • etch — Engrave (metal, glass, or stone ) by coating it with a protective layer, drawing on it with a needle, and then covering it with acid to attack the parts the needle has exposed, especially in order to produce prints from it.
  • exch — (jargon)   /eks'ch*/ or /eksch/ To exchange two things, each for the other; to swap places. If you point to two people sitting down and say "Exch!", you are asking them to trade places. EXCH, meaning EXCHange, was originally the name of a PDP-10 instruction that exchanged the contents of a register and a memory location. Many newer hackers are probably thinking instead of the PostScript exchange operator (which is usually written in lowercase).
  • foch — Ferdinand [fer-dee-nahn] /fɛr diˈnɑ̃/ (Show IPA), 1851–1929, French marshal.
  • gchq — Government Communications Headquarters
  • hech — an exclamation of surprise, annoyance, etc
  • inch — a small island near the seacoast.
  • itch — to have or feel a peculiar tingling or uneasy irritation of the skin that causes a desire to scratch the part affected: My nose itches.
  • kochEdward I. 1924–2013, U.S. politician: mayor of New York City 1977–89.
  • lech — to behave like a lecher (often followed by for or after).
  • lich — the body; the trunk.
  • loch — a lake.
  • lych — the body; the trunk.
  • machErnst [ernst] /ɛrnst/ (Show IPA), 1838–1916, Austrian physicist, psychologist, and philosopher.
  • mech — A mechanic.
  • mich — Alternative form of mitch.
  • moch — a period of humid, clammy, or muggy weather
  • much — great in quantity, measure, or degree: too much cake.
  • nach — an Indian dance
  • nuch — (surfing, slang, dated) Not much, hardly, barely, to an insignificant degree.
  • oche — (darts) A line behind which a player's front foot must be placed when throwing a dart.
  • ochsAdolph Simon, 1858–1935, U.S. newspaper publisher.
  • orch — orchestra
  • ouch — a clasp, buckle, or brooch, especially one worn for ornament.
  • pich — a West Indian shrub or small tree, Calliandra portoricensis, of the legume family, having numerous leaflets and white, night-blooming, flowers.
  • rach — A dog that hunts by scent.
  • rich — having wealth or great possessions; abundantly supplied with resources, means, or funds; wealthy: a rich man; a rich nation.
  • sch. — school
  • sech — a hyperbolic secant; a hyperbolic function that is the reciprocal of cosh
  • such — of the kind, character, degree, extent, etc., of that or those indicated or implied: Such a man is dangerous.
  • tach — tachometer.
  • tech — technical: The engineers sat together exchanging tech talk.
  • tochErnst [ernst] /ɛrnst/ (Show IPA), 1887–1964, Austrian composer.
  • ucho — (audio, software)   (Polish for "ear") A program by Stanislaw Raczynski for analysing wav audio files to determine which musical notes are sounding at each instant. UCHO can output the results as a MIDI file.
  • wach — Western Athletic Conference Hockey
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