Unscramble CHANT
21 words found from the letters CHANT — with Scrabble scores for every result.
Try Your Own Letters →About the Letters CHANT
Word games reward players who know how to extract maximum value from any combination of letters. The set CHANT yields 21 valid English words — each one playable in Scrabble, Words With Friends, or as a Wordle candidate. This page presents every valid result with its Scrabble score so that you can identify not just which plays are possible but which plays are best. The words are drawn from the ENABLE lexicon, which forms the foundation of the TWL tournament dictionary used in North America and overlaps substantially with the Collins SOWPODS list used in UK and Australian competitive play.
Letter Analysis
The letter set CHANT contains 1 vowel (A) and 4 consonants (C, H, N, T). It includes the high-value tile H (4 pts), which should be used on premium squares whenever possible. With 5 unique letters to work with, this is a focused set that rewards knowing short, high-value words.
For more on word game strategy, read our Scrabble Strategy Guide, the Best Wordle Starting Words guide, or the complete two-letter Scrabble words list.
Best Scoring Words from CHANT
All 21 Words from CHANT
5-Letter Words (2)
4-Letter Words (5)
3-Letter Words (8)
2-Letter Words (6)
How to Use These Letters in Scrabble or Wordle
Getting the most from the letters CHANT in Scrabble means thinking beyond the obvious word. Before playing the longest word you see, check whether a shorter word placed on a double or triple word score square would outscore it. A 5-letter word on a TWS (triple word score) beats most 7-letter words on a blank square. Balance length against premium square access every turn.
For anagram puzzles and cryptic crosswords, these letters can form the clue answer — scroll through the grouped word lengths to find entries that match your required length and any confirmed letters.
Players in the UK and Australia using Collins SOWPODS may find additional valid words beyond those shown — our results cover the ENABLE core list which aligns with both TWL and the majority of SOWPODS. Learn more in our dictionary comparison guide.
Example Sentences
See how the top words from CHANT are used in everyday English:
- CHAT: They had a long chat over coffee.
- HAT: He wore a blue hat to the game.
- CAN: She can speak three languages fluently.
- CAT: The cat sat on the warm windowsill.
- TAN: After a week at the beach, she had a tan.
How This Helps Students
Games work better than drills. When a student finds a word by solving a puzzle, the moment of discovery creates a positive feeling that makes the word stick. Research shows that words learned through play are recalled far more easily than words from a list.
A student who tries five wrong guesses before finding the right word has thought far more deeply about that word than one who simply read a definition. That is why words discovered through play tend to stay in long-term memory.
- Genuine curiosity: Puzzles create real motivation to find answers — not just pressure to complete a task.
- Learning from mistakes: Wrong guesses before the right answer build a stronger understanding of letter patterns.
- Self-checking: Students test and correct their own answers, which builds confidence and independence.
- Real-world use: Words found through games appear in daily conversation more often than words from a textbook.
Tips to Find Words Faster
- Start with 2- and 3-letter words: Short valid words (GO, AT, IN, ARE, EAR, ATE) are easy to spot and often anchor longer words you can build from them.
- Look for -TION and -SION: These suffixes create nouns from verbs and are extremely common in English — if you have T, I, O, N in your set, a noun may be hiding there.
- Consider less obvious words: Common short words like AA (type of lava), QI (life force), and ZA (pizza) are valid in most word games and easy to miss.
- Break consonant clusters apart: The cluster NGTH appears in words like LENGTH and STRENGTH — recognising these multi-consonant sequences unlocks long words quickly.
- Ask “what root is here?”: If you see the letters A, C, T, you have the root ACT — from which you can build FACT, PACT, TACT, ACTED, ACTOR, ENACT.
- Use this page as your teacher: Every word in the list below that you did not know before is a new vocabulary entry — look it up and note the definition.
Practice Your Word Skills
Ready to test what you have learned? Try entering your own letters into our free word unscrambler and discover every valid word in under a second.
Try the Word Finder →Supports Scrabble, Wordle, Words With Friends, Boggle & more — free, no login required.
Try More Word Combinations
← Back to Word Unscrambler Pro | Browse All Combos | Strategy Guides