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

  • blokart — a single-seat three-wheeled vehicle with a sail, built to be propelled over land by the wind
  • boaster — a chisel for boasting stone.
  • boggart — a ghost or poltergeist
  • borotra — Jean (Robert) (ʒɑ̃). 1898–1994, French tennis player: secretary general of physical education under the Vichy government (1940)
  • borstal — In Britain in the past, a borstal was a kind of prison for young criminals, who were not old enough to be sent to ordinary prisons.
  • botargo — a relish consisting of the roe of mullet or tunny, salted and pressed into rolls
  • bra top — an item of women's clothing that looks like a bra but is worn as outerwear
  • bradsot — braxy (def 1).
  • bromate — any salt or ester of bromic acid, containing the monovalent group -BrO3 or ion BrO3–
  • brotula — any of several chiefly deep-sea fishes of the family Brotulidae.
  • cabrito — the flesh of a young goat, used as food
  • caltrop — any tropical or subtropical plant of the zygophyllaceous genera Tribulus and Kallstroemia that have spiny burs or bracts
  • cantors — Plural form of cantor.
  • captors — Plural form of captor.
  • carlota — original name Marie Charlotte Amélie Augustine Victoire Clémentine Léopoldine. 1840–1927, wife of Maximilian; empress of Mexico (1864–67)
  • carlton — a town in N central England, in S Nottinghamshire. Pop: 48 493 (2001)
  • carotid — either one of the two principal arteries that supply blood to the head and neck
  • carotin — carotene.
  • carport — A carport is a shelter for cars which is attached to a house and consists of a flat roof supported on pillars.
  • carrots — Plural form of carrot.
  • carroty — of a reddish or yellowish-orange colour
  • cartons — Plural form of carton.
  • cartoon — A cartoon is a humorous drawing or series of drawings in a newspaper or magazine.
  • castors — Plural form of castor.
  • castory — the dye derived from beaver pelts
  • catworm — an active carnivorous polychaete worm, Nephthys hombergii, that is about 10cm (4in) long, having a pearly sheen to its body: often dug for bait
  • cavorts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cavort.
  • cerato- — denoting horn or a hornlike part
  • charcot — Jean Martin (ʒɑ̃ martɛ̃). 1825–93, French neurologist, noted for his attempt using hypnotism to find an organic cause for hysteria, which influenced Freud
  • chariot — In ancient times, chariots were fast-moving vehicles with two wheels that were pulled by horses.
  • charlotJean [jeen;; French zhahn] /dʒin;; French ʒɑ̃/ (Show IPA), 1898–1979, U.S. painter, lithographer, and illustrator; born in France and active in Mexico.
  • citator — a legal publication listing cases and statutes, their history and current status
  • co-star — An actor's or actress's co-stars are the other actors or actresses who also have one of the main parts in a particular film.
  • coactor — one of two or more people or species that interact
  • coaster — A coaster is a small mat that you put underneath a glass or cup to protect the surface of a table.
  • coaters — Plural form of coater.
  • compart — to divide into parts
  • comtran — ["Communications Computer Language COMTRAN", D.W. Clark et al, RADC-TR-69-190, Rose Air Development Center, Griffiss AFB, NY, July 1969].
  • contra- — against; contrary; opposing; contrasting
  • contras — (often initial capital letter) a member of a counterrevolutionary guerrilla group in Nicaragua.
  • coranto — courante
  • cordate — heart-shaped
  • cortado — A cup of espresso served with warm milk.
  • cortina — the weblike part of certain mushrooms, which hangs from the edge of the pileus and consists of silky fibrils
  • cortona — a town in central Italy, in Tuscany: Roman and Etruscan remains, 15th-century cathedral. Pop: 22 048 (2001)
  • coryateThomas, 1577–1617, English traveler and author.
  • costard — an English variety of apple tree
  • costars — Plural form of costar.
  • courant — a courante
  • cratons — Plural form of craton.
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