0%

7-letter words containing a, e, r, t

  • basterd — Misspelling of bastard.
  • basters — Plural form of baster.
  • batcher — anything that makes something into batches
  • bathers — a swimming costume
  • battero — a heavy club
  • batters — Plural form of batter.
  • battery — Batteries are small devices that provide the power for electrical items such as radios and children's toys.
  • battler — a hostile encounter or engagement between opposing military forces: the battle of Waterloo.
  • batture — A sea bed or a river bed that has been raised or elevated.
  • bearcat — Informal. a person or thing that fights or acts with force or fierceness.
  • bearest — (archaic) Second-person singular present simple form of 'bear'.
  • beareth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of bear.
  • beaters — Plural form of beater.
  • beatrix — full name Beatrix Wilhelmina Armgard. born 1938, queen of the Netherlands (1980–2013); abdicated in favour of her eldest son Willem-Alexander
  • beermat — A beermat is a cardboard mat for resting your glass of beer on in a bar or pub.
  • berated — to scold; rebuke: He berated them in public.
  • berchta — Perchta.
  • beretta — biretta
  • bertram — a masculine name: dim. Bertie; var. Bertrand
  • betread — to tread upon
  • biretta — a stiff clerical cap having either three or four upright pieces projecting outwards from the centre to the edge: coloured black for priests, purple for bishops, red for cardinals, and white for certain members of religious orders
  • blaster — a sudden and violent gust of wind: Wintry blasts chilled us to the marrow.
  • blather — If someone is blathering on about something, they are talking for a long time about something that you consider boring or unimportant.
  • blatter — a prattle
  • bloater — a herring, or sometimes a mackerel, that has been salted in brine, smoked, and cured
  • boaster — a chisel for boasting stone.
  • bracket — If you say that someone or something is in a particular bracket, you mean that they come within a particular range, for example a range of incomes, ages, or prices.
  • brantle — a French dance
  • brattle — a rattling or clattering sound
  • bravest — possessing or exhibiting courage or courageous endurance.
  • breadth — The breadth of something is the distance between its two sides.
  • breathe — When people or animals breathe, they take air into their lungs and let it out again. When they breathe smoke or a particular kind of air, they take it into their lungs and let it out again as they breathe.
  • breaths — the air inhaled and exhaled in respiration.
  • breathy — If someone has a breathy voice, you can hear their breath when they speak or sing.
  • bromate — any salt or ester of bromic acid, containing the monovalent group -BrO3 or ion BrO3–
  • bursate — resembling or containing a bursa
  • cabaret — Cabaret is live entertainment consisting of dancing, singing, or comedy acts that are performed in the evening in restaurants or nightclubs.
  • calvert — Sir George, 1st Baron Baltimore. ?1580–1632, English statesman; founder of the colony of Maryland
  • canters — Plural form of canter.
  • cantred — a district comprising a hundred villages
  • caprate — a salt of capric acid
  • capture — If you capture someone or something, you catch them, especially in a war.
  • carnate — Invested with, or embodied in, flesh.
  • carnets — Plural form of carnet.
  • carpets — Plural form of carpet.
  • carreta — a simple two-wheeled oxcart.
  • cartage — the process or cost of carting
  • cartels — Plural form of cartel.
  • carters — Plural form of carter.
  • cartier — Jacques (ʒɑk). 1491–1557, French navigator and explorer in Canada, who discovered the St Lawrence River (1535)
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?