8-letter words containing her
- cipherer — a person who ciphers
- clashers — to make a loud, harsh noise: The gears of the old car clashed and grated.
- clencher — something or someone who clenches
- clincher — A clincher is a fact or argument that finally proves something, settles a dispute, or helps someone achieve a victory.
- clutcher — to seize with or as with the hands or claws; snatch: The bird swooped down and clutched its prey with its claws.
- coachers — Plural form of coacher.
- coherent — If something is coherent, it is well planned, so that it is clear and sensible and all its parts go well with each other.
- cohering — Present participle of cohere.
- coinhere — to inhere together
- comether — the act of persuading or coaxing
- cosherer — a person who coshers
- coughers — Plural form of cougher.
- cowherds — Plural form of cowherd.
- crashers — Plural form of crasher.
- croucher — Agent noun of crouch: one who crouches.
- cruncher — the critical or decisive thing
- crushers — Plural form of crusher.
- cyphered — Simple past tense and past participle of cypher.
- cytherea — Aphrodite
- decipher — to determine the meaning of (something obscure or illegible)
- detacher — One who or that which detaches.
- disherit — to disinherit.
- dithered — Simple past tense and past participle of dither.
- ditherer — a trembling; vibration.
- docherty — Pete. born 1979, English rock musician and songwriter; member of The Libertines (1997–2004) and Babyshambles (from 2005)
- dpsather — Data-parallel Sather. deterministic fine-grained parallelism. E-mail: <[email protected]>. ftp://lynx.csis.dit.csiro.au/p/pub/ather/dpsather.papers.
- drencher — One who, or that which, drenches.
- druthers — one's own way, choice, or preference: If I had my druthers, I'd dance all night.
- durocher — Leo Ernest ("The Lip") 1905–91, U.S. baseball player and manager.
- encipher — Convert (a message or piece of text) into a coded form ; encrypt.
- enherite — Archaic form of inherit.
- enricher — One who enriches.
- ensphere — (transitive) To place in a sphere; to envelop.
- ethercap — a spider
- ethereal — Extremely delicate and light in a way that seems too perfect for this world.
- etherege — Sir George. ?1635–?92, English Restoration dramatist; author of the comedies The Comical Revenge (1664), She would if she could (1668), and The Man of Mode (1676)
- etherial — Archaic form of ethereal.
- etherify — (organic chemistry) To convert (an alcohol etc.) into an ether.
- etherion — a gas formerly believed to exist in air
- etherise — Alternative spelling of etherize.
- etherish — resembling ether
- etherism — an addiction to ether
- etherist — a person who administers ether
- etherize — Anesthetize (a person or animal) with ether.
- ethernet — Alternative capitalization of Ethernet.
- exahertz — A unit of measurement based on one quintillion hertz.
- exotherm — (chemistry) Any exothermic compound.
- fathered — a male parent.
- fatherly — of, like, or befitting a father.
- feathers — an apparatus for splitting stone, consisting of two tapered bars (feathers) inserted into a hole drilled into the stone, between which a narrow wedge (plug) is hammered to spread them.