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7-letter words containing c, e, r, t, i

  • estrich — ostrich
  • etheric — Of or pertaining to the ether (all-pervading medium).
  • eucrite — a type of stony meteorite
  • evictor — One who evicts.
  • exciter — A thing that produces excitation, in particular a device that provides a magnetizing current for the electromagnets in a motor or generator.
  • excitor — a nerve that, when stimulated, causes increased activity in the organ or part it supplies
  • heretic — a professed believer who maintains religious opinions contrary to those accepted by his or her church or rejects doctrines prescribed by that church.
  • hitcher — to fasten or tie, especially temporarily, by means of a hook, rope, strap, etc.; tether: Steve hitched the horse to one of the posts.
  • icetran — An extension of Fortran IV and a component of ICES.
  • icteric — pertaining to or affected with icterus; jaundiced.
  • icterid — any bird of the N American family Icteridae
  • icterus — jaundice (def 1).
  • inciter — to stir, encourage, or urge on; stimulate or prompt to action: to incite a crowd to riot.
  • increst — (transitive) To adorn with a crest.
  • interac — a system of electronic bank payments or withdrawals
  • matrice — Obsolete form of matrix.
  • metrics — Mathematics. a nonnegative real-valued function having properties analogous to those of the distance between points on a real line, as the distance between two points being independent of the order of the points, the distance between two points being zero if, and only if, the two points coincide, and the distance between two points being less than or equal to the sum of the distances from each point to an arbitrary third point.
  • mitcher — Alternative form of micher.
  • mortice — to secure with a mortise and tenon.
  • nacrite — a clay mineral of the kaolinite group
  • neritic — of or relating to the region of water lying directly above the sublittoral zone of the sea bottom.
  • noticer — Someone who notices.
  • orectic — of or relating to desire; appetitive.
  • paretic — partial motor paralysis.
  • picrate — a salt or ester of picric acid.
  • picrite — a granular igneous rock composed chiefly of olivine and augite, but containing small amounts of feldspar.
  • picture — a visual representation of a person, object, or scene, as a painting, drawing, photograph, etc.: I carry a picture of my grandchild in my wallet.
  • pitcherMolly (Mary Ludwig Hays McCauley) 1754–1832, American Revolutionary heroine.
  • predict — to declare or tell in advance; prophesy; foretell: to predict the weather; to predict the fall of a civilization.
  • pricket — a sharp metal point on which to stick a candle.
  • pyretic — of, pertaining to, affected by, or producing fever.
  • raciest — slightly improper or indelicate; suggestive; risqué.
  • receipt — a written acknowledgment of having received, or taken into one's possession, a specified amount of money, goods, etc.
  • recital — a musical entertainment given usually by a single performer or by a performer and one or more accompanists.
  • recited — to repeat the words of, as from memory, especially in a formal manner: to recite a lesson.
  • reciter — to repeat the words of, as from memory, especially in a formal manner: to recite a lesson.
  • recites — to repeat the words of, as from memory, especially in a formal manner: to recite a lesson.
  • recruit — a newly enlisted or drafted member of the armed forces.
  • rectify — to make, put, or set right; remedy; correct: He sent them a check to rectify his account.
  • rection — the determination of the form of one word by the presence of another word in a phrase or sentence
  • rectrix — one of the tail feathers of a bird controlling direction during flight.
  • reticle — a network of fine lines, wires, or the like placed in the focus of the eyepiece of an optical instrument.
  • rhaetic — of or relating to a series of rocks formed in the late Triassic period
  • richest — having wealth or great possessions; abundantly supplied with resources, means, or funds; wealthy: a rich man; a rich nation.
  • richterBurton, born 1931, U.S. physicist: Nobel prize 1976.
  • rickets — a disease of childhood, characterized by softening of the bones as a result of inadequate intake of vitamin D and insufficient exposure to sunlight, also associated with impaired calcium and phosphorus metabolism.
  • rickety — likely to fall or collapse; shaky: a rickety chair.
  • sickertWalter Richard, 1860–1942, English painter.
  • stearic — of or relating to suet or fat.
  • sticker — a person or thing that sticks.
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