6-letter words that end in her
- luther — Martin [mahr-tn;; German mahr-teen] /ˈmɑr tn;; German ˈmɑr tin/ (Show IPA), 1483–1546, German theologian and author: leader, in Germany, of the Protestant Reformation.
- macher — A person who gets things done.
- masher — a man who makes advances, especially to women he does not know, with a view to physical intimacy.
- mather — Cotton, 1663–1728, American clergyman and author.
- mether — (dialect) Four in the old counting system of Northern England.
- micher — One who goes sneaking about for dishonest or improper purposes; one who skulks, or keeps out of sight; a pander or go-between.
- mither — mother1 .
- mosher — One who moshes.
- mother — parent
- musher — a person who competes in cross-country races with dog team and sled.
- nether — lying or believed to lie beneath the earth's surface; infernal: the nether regions.
- nicher — a neigh
- nigher — near in space, time, or relation: The time draws nigh.
- nither — Alternative form of nether.
- nosher — Informal. a person who snacks, especially one who does so often or continuously.
- nother — Informal. a whole nother, an entirely different; a whole other.
- outher — (obsolete) either.
- pisher — a young boy or person who still has little experience
- pother — commotion; uproar.
- pusher — a person or thing that pushes.
- rasher — vermilion rockfish.
- rather — in a measure; to a certain extent; somewhat: rather good.
- richer — having wealth or great possessions; abundantly supplied with resources, means, or funds; wealthy: a rich man; a rich nation.
- rusher — the act of rushing; a rapid, impetuous, or violent onward movement.
- sather — (language) /Say-ther/ (Named after the Sather Tower at UCB, as opposed to the Eiffel Tower). An interactive object-oriented language designed by Steve M. Omohundro at ICSI in 1991. Sather has simple syntax, similar to Eiffel, but it is non-proprietary and faster. Sather 0.2 was nearly a subset of Eiffel 2.0, but Sather 1.0 adds many distinctive features: parameterised classes, multiple inheritance, statically-checked strong typing, garbage collection. The compiler generates C as an intermediate language. There are versions for most workstations. Sather attempts to retain much of Eiffel's theoretical cleanliness and simplicity while achieving the efficiency of C++. The compiler generates efficient and portable C code which is easily integrated with existing code. A variety of development tools including a debugger and browser based on gdb and a GNU Emacs development environment have also been written. There is also a class library with several hundred classes that implement a variety of basic data structures and numerical, geometric, connectionist, statistical, and graphical abstractions. The authors would like to encourage contributions to the library and hope to build a large collection of efficient, well-written, well-tested classes in a variety of areas of computer science. Sather runs on Sun-4, HP9000/300, Decstation 5000, MIPS, Sony News 3000, Sequent/Dynix, SCO SysVR3.2, NeXT, Linux. See also dpSather, pSather, Sather-K. E-mail: <[email protected]>. Mailing list: [email protected]
- sopher — scribe1 (def 3).
- sucher — of the kind, character, degree, extent, etc., of that or those indicated or implied: Such a man is dangerous.
- sypher — to join (boards having beveled edges) so as to make a flush surface.
- tether — a rope, chain, or the like, by which an animal is fastened to a fixed object so as to limit its range of movement.
- tither — a person who gives or pays tithes, as to a church.
- tocher — a dowry; marriage settlement given to the groom by the bride or her family.
- tosher — a person who scavenged in the sewers in Victorian London
- tother — the other
- ussher — James, 1581–1656, Irish prelate and scholar.
- washer — the act or process of washing with water or other liquid: to give the car a wash.
- wether — a castrated male sheep.
- wisher — to want; desire; long for (usually followed by an infinitive or a clause): I wish to travel. I wish that it were morning.
- wither — to shrivel; fade; decay: The grapes had withered on the vine.
- wuther — (of wind) to blow fiercely.
- zither — a musical instrument, consisting of a flat sounding box with numerous strings stretched over it, that is placed on a horizontal surface and played with a plectrum and the fingertips.