These are the meanings of the letters REAHCGT when you unscramble them.
- Charge (n.)
Thirty-six pigs of lead, each pig weighing about seventy pounds; -- called also charre.
- Charge (n.)
Weight; import; value.
- Charge (v. i.)
To debit on an account; as, to charge for purchases.
- Charge (v. i.)
To demand a price; as, to charge high for goods.
- Charge (v. i.)
To make an onset or rush; as, to charge with fixed bayonets.
- Charge (v. i.)
To squat on its belly and be still; -- a command given by a sportsman to a dog.
- Charge (v. t.)
A bearing. See Bearing, n., 8.
- Charge (v. t.)
A load or burder laid upon a person or thing.
- Charge (v. t.)
A person or thing commited or intrusted to the care, custody, or management of another; a trust.
- Charge (v. t.)
A position (of a weapon) fitted for attack; as, to bring a weapon to the charge.
- Charge (v. t.)
A soft of plaster or ointment.
- Charge (v. t.)
An accusation of a wrong of offense; allegation; indictment; specification of something alleged.
- Charge (v. t.)
An address (esp. an earnest or impressive address) containing instruction or exhortation; as, the charge of a judge to a jury; the charge of a bishop to his clergy.
- Charge (v. t.)
An entry or a account of that which is due from one party to another; that which is debited in a business transaction; as, a charge in an account book.
- Charge (v. t.)
An order; a mandate or command; an injunction.
- Charge (v. t.)
Custody or care of any person, thing, or place; office; responsibility; oversight; obigation; duty.
- Charge (v. t.)
Harm.
- Charge (v. t.)
Heed; care; anxiety; trouble.
- Charge (v. t.)
That quantity, as of ammunition, electricity, ore, fuel, etc., which any apparatus, as a gun, battery, furnace, machine, etc., is intended to receive and fitted to hold, or which is actually in it at one time
- Charge (v. t.)
The act of rushing upon, or towards, an enemy; a sudden onset or attack, as of troops, esp. cavalry; hence, the signal for attack; as, to sound the charge.
- Charge (v. t.)
The price demanded for a thing or service.
- Charge (v. t.)
To accuse; to make a charge or assertion against (a person or thing); to lay the responsibility (for something said or done) at the door of.
- Charge (v. t.)
To assume as a bearing; as, he charges three roses or; to add to or represent on; as, he charges his shield with three roses or.
- Charge (v. t.)
To bear down upon; to rush upon; to attack.
- Charge (v. t.)
To call to account; to challenge.
- Charge (v. t.)
To fix or demand as a price; as, he charges two dollars a barrel for apples.
- Charge (v. t.)
To impute or ascribe; to lay to one's charge.
- Charge (v. t.)
To lay on or impose, as a load, tax, or burden; to load; to fill.
- Charge (v. t.)
To lay on or impose, as a task, duty, or trust; to command, instruct, or exhort with authority; to enjoin; to urge earnestly; as, to charge a jury; to charge the clergy of a diocese; to charge an agent.
- Charge (v. t.)
To lay on, impose, or make subject to or liable for.
- Charge (v. t.)
To ornament with or cause to bear; as, to charge an architectural member with a molding.
- Charge (v. t.)
To place something to the account of as a debt; to debit, as, to charge one with goods. Also, to enter upon the debit side of an account; as, to charge a sum to one.
- Charge (v. t.)
To place within or upon any firearm, piece of apparatus or machinery, the quantity it is intended and fitted to hold or bear; to load; to fill; as, to charge a gun; to charge an electrical machine, etc.
- Charge (v. t.)
Whatever constitutes a burden on property, as rents, taxes, lines, etc.; costs; expense incurred; -- usually in the plural.
- Gather (n.)
A plait or fold in cloth, made by drawing a thread through it; a pucker.
- Gather (n.)
The inclination forward of the axle journals to keep the wheels from working outward.
- Gather (n.)
The soffit or under surface of the masonry required in gathering. See Gather, v. t., 7.
- Gather (v. i.)
To collect or bring things together.
- Gather (v. i.)
To come together; to collect; to unite; to become assembled; to congregate.
- Gather (v. i.)
To concentrate; to come to a head, as a sore, and generate pus; as, a boil has gathered.
- Gather (v. i.)
To grow larger by accretion; to increase.
- Gather (v. t.)
To accumulate by collecting and saving little by little; to amass; to gain; to heap up.
- Gather (v. t.)
To bring closely together the parts or particles of; to contract; to compress; to bring together in folds or plaits, as a garment; also, to draw together, as a piece of cloth by a thread; to pucker; to plait; as, to gather a ruffle.
- Gather (v. t.)
To bring together, or nearer together, in masonry, as where the width of a fireplace is rapidly diminished to the width of the flue, or the like.
- Gather (v. t.)
To bring together; to collect, as a number of separate things, into one place, or into one aggregate body; to assemble; to muster; to congregate.
- Gather (v. t.)
To derive, or deduce, as an inference; to collect, as a conclusion, from circumstances that suggest, or arguments that prove; to infer; to conclude.
- Gather (v. t.)
To gain; to win.
- Gather (v. t.)
To haul in; to take up; as, to gather the slack of a rope.
- Gather (v. t.)
To pick out and bring together from among what is of less value; to collect, as a harvest; to harvest; to cull; to pick off; to pluck.
- rachet (unknown)
Sorry. I don't have the meaning of this word.