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7-letter words containing a, s, m, t

  • rastrum — a pen for drawing the five lines of a musical stave simultaneously
  • restamp — to strike or beat with a forcible, downward thrust of the foot.
  • saktism — Shaktism.
  • samhita — Veda (def 2).
  • samnite — an ancient country in central Italy.
  • samoset — died 1653? North American Indian leader: aided Pilgrims during early years in New England.
  • sanctum — a sacred or holy place.
  • santims — a former coin of Latvia, the 100th part of a lat.
  • sarment — a thin stem or runner that forms a new plant
  • satsuma — a Japanese pottery from Kyushu, first produced in the early 17th century and after 1800 having a crackle glaze and overglaze polychrome enameling and gilding.
  • scatoma — a tumorlike mass of feces in the colon or rectum.
  • scotoma — loss of vision in a part of the visual field; blind spot.
  • seamoth — dragonfish (def 2).
  • seamset — a tool which flattens seams in metal and other materials
  • sematic — serving as a sign or warning of danger, as the conspicuous colors or markings of certain poisonous animals.
  • sfumato — the subtle and minute gradation of tone and color used to blur or veil the contours of a form in painting.
  • sgt maj — Sergeant Major
  • shmaltz — schmaltz.
  • shmatte — an old ragged garment; tattered article of clothing.
  • sigmate — having the form of the Greek sigma or the letter S.
  • simatic — an assemblage of rocks, rich in silica and magnesium, that constitutes the lower layer of the earth's crust and is found beneath the ocean floors and the sial of continents.
  • simitar — a curved, single-edged sword of Asian, especially Eastern origin.
  • smarted — to be a source of sharp, local, and usually superficial pain, as a wound.
  • smarten — to make more trim or spruce; improve in appearance (usually followed by up): Try to smarten up your outfit.
  • smarter — to be a source of sharp, local, and usually superficial pain, as a wound.
  • smartly — to be a source of sharp, local, and usually superficial pain, as a wound.
  • smatter — to speak (a language, words, etc.) with superficial knowledge or understanding.
  • smeatonJohn, 1724–92, English engineer.
  • smetana — Bedřich [Czech be-drzhikh] /Czech ˈbɛ drʒɪx/ (Show IPA), 1824–84, Czech composer.
  • somatic — of the body; bodily; physical.
  • somato- — body
  • somital — any of the longitudinal series of segments or parts into which the body of certain animals is divided; a metamere.
  • spambot — a bot that searches the Internet for email addresses in order to send spam.
  • st-malo — seaport & resort town on an island in the Gulf of St-Malo, NW France: pop. 46,000
  • stadium — a sports arena, usually oval or horseshoe-shaped, with tiers of seats for spectators.
  • stambul — the oldest part and principal Turkish residential section of Istanbul, south of the Golden Horn.
  • stamina — a plural of stamen.
  • stamitzCarl Philipp, 1745–1801, German composer and violinist (son of Johann).
  • stammel — a coarse woollen cloth in former use for undergarments, etc, and usually dyed red
  • stammer — to speak with involuntary breaks and pauses, or with spasmodic repetitions of syllables or sounds.
  • stamnos — a storage jar having an oval body tapering at the base and two horizontal handles set on the shoulder.
  • stamped — A stamped envelope or package has a stamp stuck on it.
  • stamper — a person or thing that stamps.
  • stannum — tin.
  • stardom — the world or class of professional stars, as of the stage.
  • starmod — *MOD
  • stasima — (in ancient Greek drama) a choral ode, especially in tragedy, divided into strophe and antistrophe: usually alternating with the epeisodion and, in the final ode, preceding the exodos.
  • statism — the principle or policy of concentrating extensive economic, political, and related controls in the state at the cost of individual liberty.
  • statmux — statistical time division multiplexing
  • statohm — the electrostatic unit of resistance, equivalent to 8.9876 × 10 11 ohms and equal to the resistance in a conductor in which one statvolt of potential difference produces a current of one statampere.
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