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7-letter words containing l, h, e

  • cafileh — Alternative form of cafila.
  • caleche — calash
  • caliche — a bed of sand or clay in arid regions cemented by calcium carbonate, sodium chloride, and other soluble minerals
  • calmeth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of calm.
  • caltech — the California Institute of Technology
  • cathole — one of a pair of holes in the after part of a ship through which hawsers are passed for steadying the ship or heaving astern
  • ceilidh — A ceilidh is an informal entertainment, especially in Scotland or Ireland, at which there is folk music, singing, and dancing.
  • cephal- — cephalo-
  • cephala — the head, especially of an arthropod.
  • chackle — to chatter; jabber.
  • chaebol — a large, usually family-owned, business group in South Korea
  • chaetal — of or relating to chaeta
  • chaldea — an ancient region of Babylonia; the land lying between the Euphrates delta, the Persian Gulf, and the Arabian desert
  • chaldee — a nontechnical term for Biblical Aramaic, which was once believed to be the language of the ancient Chaldeans
  • chalets — Plural form of chalet.
  • chalice — A chalice is a large gold or silver cup with a stem. Chalices are used to hold wine in the Christian service of Holy Communion.
  • chalked — Simple past tense and past participle of chalk.
  • challie — a soft fabric of plain weave in wool, cotton, rayon, or other staple fiber, either in a solid color or, more often, a small print.
  • chalone — any internal secretion that inhibits a physiological process or function
  • chancel — The chancel is the part of a church containing the altar, where the clergy and the choir usually sit.
  • channel — A channel is a television station.
  • chapels — Plural form of chapel.
  • chaplet — an ornamental wreath of flowers, beads, etc, worn on the head
  • chappel — (dated, 17-18th C.) alternative spelling of chapel.
  • charles — Prince of Wales. born 1948, son of Elizabeth II; heir apparent to the throne of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. He married (1981) Lady Diana Spencer; they separated in 1992 and were divorced in 1996; their son, Prince William of Wales, was born in 1982 and their second son, Prince Henry, in 1984; married (2005) Camilla Parker Bowles
  • charley — Victor Charlie.
  • charlie — a silly person; fool
  • charnel — ghastly; sepulchral; deathly
  • chasles — Michel [mee-shel] /miˈʃɛl/ (Show IPA), 1793–1880, French mathematician.
  • chattel — Chattels are things that belong to you.
  • cheaply — costing very little; relatively low in price; inexpensive: a cheap dress.
  • cheerly — cheerful or cheerfully
  • cheilo- — chilo-
  • chelate — a coordination compound in which a metal atom or ion is bound to a ligand at two or more points on the ligand, so as to form a heterocyclic ring containing a metal atom
  • chellup — noise
  • chelmno — a Nazi concentration camp in central Poland.
  • cheloid — keloid
  • chelone — any plant of the hardy N American genus Chelone, grown for its white, rose, or purple flower spikes: family Scrophulariaceae
  • chelsea — a residential district of SW London, in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea: site of the Chelsea Royal Hospital for old and infirm soldiers (Chelsea Pensioners)
  • chervil — Chervil is a herb that tastes like aniseed.
  • chessel — a mould used in cheese-making
  • chiefly — You use chiefly to indicate that a particular reason, emotion, method, or feature is the main or most important one.
  • chifley — Joseph Benedict. 1885–1951, Australian statesman; prime minister of Australia (1945–49)
  • childed — (obsolete) Having a child.
  • childer — (Ireland, obsolete elsewhere) Plural form of child.
  • chilean — of or relating to Chile or its inhabitants
  • chilies — Plural form of chili.
  • chilled — (of a person) feeling cold
  • chiller — A chiller is a very frightening film or novel.
  • chilver — A female lamb.
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