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)