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From c + h.
A digraph from c and h, considered an individual letter in some languages.
Initialism of English cosine, hyperbolic.
Alternative form of cosh (“hyperbolic cosine”)
Clipping of English Chamorro.
(international standards) ISO 639-1 language code for Chamorro.
Abbreviation of chain (“a unit of measurement equal to 22 yards”).
(crochet) Abbreviation of chain (stitch)
Abbreviation of channel, in reference to telephones, audio, radio, and television.
Abbreviation of chapter (“main section of a book”).
Abbreviation of chestnut (“a dark reddish-brown colored horse”).
(crochet) Abbreviation of chain.
Apheretic form of ich or utch, ultimately from Old English iċ (“I”).
(obsolete, dialectal) Alternative form of I.
A letter of the Blin alphabet, written in the Latin script.
A letter of the Central Mazahua alphabet, written in the Latin script.
A letter of the Chipewyan alphabet, written in the Latin script.
The fourteenth letter of the Czech alphabet, written in the Latin script; preceded by h and followed by i.
In names or at the beginning of a sentence the form Ch is used.
A letter of the Esperanto alphabet, written in the Latin script, a digraph used in the h-sistemo to represent ĉ.
abbreviation of chaque (“each, ea”).
abbreviation of cheval-vapeur (“horsepower, hp”).
Used for all types of (metric) horsepower except tax horsepower, which uses the initialisms cv or CV.
A letter of the Hadza alphabet, written in the Latin script.
A digraph of the Hungarian alphabet, written in the Latin script; used in several Hungarian words, as well as in some surnames, given names, and geographical names.
It is used (among others) in the following words, along with their derivations and compounds: Achilles-ín, allochton, acháj, achát, akrosztichon, almanach, anarchia/anarchikus/anarchista/anarchizmus, archaikus/archaizál/archaizmus, archeológia/archeológus, archimandrita, architektúra, archivál/archivális/archívum, autochton, bacchanália, bacchánsnő, baldachin, barchesz, barkochba/barkochbázik, bronchitisz, cech, chanti, charleston, charta, charter, chartizmus, chata, chianti, chorijambus, chripka, couchette, disztichon, durchmars, echó, echt, eucharisztia/eucharisztikus, eunuch, exarcha, fach, franchise, gaucho, gouache, guttapercha, hierarchia/hierarchikus, hipochonder/hipochondria, ichtioszaurusz, jacht, kapitälchen, krach, lichthóf, macher, machiavellizmus, machináció/machinál, malachit, mannlicher, matriarchátus, mazochista/mazochizmus, mechanika/mechanikus/mechanisztikus/mechanizál/mechanizmus, mettlachi, moloch, monarchia/monarchikus/monarchista, oligarcha/oligarchia/oligarchikus, orchidea, patriarcha/patriarchális/patriarchátus, pech/peches, poncho, poncichter, psziché/pszichiáter/pszichiátria/pszichikai/pszichikum/pszicho-/pszichózis, richtig, rizskoch, sarlach, stich, strichel, szacharin, szinekdoché, sztrichnin, technika/technikum/technikus/technokrácia/technokrata/technológia/technológus, trachoma, trocheus, vlach, winchester.
Officially recognized given names: Achilles, Achillesz, Áchim, Archibald, Joachim, Melchior, Orchidea, Psziché, Ráchel, Richárd.
Surnames: Aulich, Damjanich, Forgách, Keglevich, Knézich, Kovách, Laczkovich, Madách, Maderspach, Orlay Petrich, Széchenyi, Széchényi, Zách, Zichy.
Geographical names: Charlestown, Chatham-szigetek, Chile, Chișinău, Déli-Georgia és Déli-Sandwich-szigetek, Liechtenstein, Nouakchott, Seychelle-szigetek as well as two settlements in Hungary, Chernelházadamonya and Zichyújfalu, a hill in Budapest, Széchenyi-hegy and a neighborhood in Budapest, Széchenyihegy.
A digraph of the Irish alphabet, written in the Latin script.
The third letter of the Isoko alphabet, written in the Latin script.
(obsolete, Tindall orthography) A letter of the Khoekhoe alphabet, written in the Latin script.
(historical) A letter of the Latvian alphabet, written in the Latin script; used in older, pre-World-War-II Latvian spelling, but now replaced everywhere by h.
This letter can still be found in older books, or in books written by the Latvian diaspora prior to the fall of the Soviet Union. It used to represent the sound of IPA symbol /x/, as distinct from /h/; but since these sounds have merged as /x/ in current Latvian pronunciation,
The twelfth letter of the Lower Sorbian alphabet, called cha and written in the Latin script; preceded by h and followed by i.
A letter of the Mam alphabet, written in the Latin script.
A letter of the Navajo alphabet, written in the Latin script.
A letter of the Osage alphabet, written in the Latin script.
The sixteenth letter of the Slovak alphabet, written in the Latin script.
(historical) The fourth letter of the Spanish alphabet, called che and written in the Latin script; preceded by c and followed by d.
Since 1994, this letter has been treated as c followed by h for collation (sorting) purposes only. In 2010, this letter was officially removed by the RAE from the Spanish alphabet.
(historical) the fourth letter of the Abecedario, called che and written in the Latin script
A letter of the Tlingit alphabet, written in the Latin script.
The twenty-eighth letter of the Uzbek alphabet, written in the Latin script.
(historical) The sixth letter of the Vietnamese alphabet, called xê hát, chờ or chờ nhẹ and written in the Latin script.
The fourth letter of the Welsh alphabet, called èch and written in the Latin script; preceded by c and followed by d.
Like the other Welsh digraphs, ch is considered a distinct letter of the Welsh alphabet for all purposes, including collation. Thus, chwech is alphabetically sorted after cyllell.
ch cannot be mutated in Welsh.
A digraph of the Xhosa alphabet, written in the Latin script.
A letter of the Yele alphabet, written in the Latin script.
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