These are the meanings of the letters CLERUCH when you unscramble them.
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Churl (a.)
Churlish; rough; selfish.
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Churl (n.)
A rough, surly, ill-bred man; a boor.
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Churl (n.)
A rustic; a countryman or laborer.
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Churl (n.)
A selfish miser; an illiberal person; a niggard.
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Cruel (a.)
Attended with cruetly; painful; harsh.
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Cruel (a.)
Causing, or fitted to cause, pain, grief, or misery.
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Cruel (a.)
Disposed to give pain to others; willing or pleased to hurt, torment, or afflict; destitute of sympathetic kindness and pity; savage; inhuman; hard-hearted; merciless.
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Cruel (n.)
See Crewel.
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culch (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.
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Curch (n.)
See Courche.
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Lucre (n.)
Gain in money or goods; profit; riches; -- often in an ill sense.
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Lurch (n.)
A double score in cribbage for the winner when his adversary has been left in the lurch.
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Lurch (n.)
A sudden roll of a ship to one side, as in heavy weather; hence, a swaying or staggering movement to one side, as that by a drunken man. Fig.: A sudden and capricious inclination of the mind.
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Lurch (n.)
An old game played with dice and counters; a variety of the game of tables.
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Lurch (v. i.)
To dodge; to shift; to play tricks.
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Lurch (v. i.)
To roll or sway suddenly to one side, as a ship or a drunken man.
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Lurch (v. i.)
To swallow or eat greedily; to devour; hence, to swallow up.
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Lurch (v. i.)
To withdraw to one side, or to a private place; to lurk.
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Lurch (v. t.)
To leave in the lurch; to cheat.
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Lurch (v. t.)
To steal; to rob.
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Ruche (n.)
A pile of arched tiles, used to catch and retain oyster spawn.
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Ruche (n.)
A plaited, quilled, or goffered strip of lace, net, ribbon, or other material, -- used in place of collars or cuffs, and as a trimming for women's dresses and bonnets.
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Ulcer (n.)
A solution of continuity in any of the soft parts of the body, discharging purulent matter, found on a surface, especially one of the natural surfaces of the body, and originating generally in a constitutional disorder; a sore discharging pus. It is distinguished from an abscess, which has its beginning, at least, in the depth of the tissues.
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Ulcer (n.)
Fig.: Anything that festers and corrupts like an open sore; a vice in character.
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Ulcer (v. t.)
To ulcerate.