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

  • r-rated — (of a motion picture) suitable for those under 17 years of age only when accompanied by an adult.
  • raddest — Informal. radical.
  • radiate — to extend, spread, or move like rays or radii from a center.
  • rattled — to give out or cause a rapid succession of short, sharp sounds, as in consequence of agitation and repeated concussions: The windows rattled in their frames.
  • readapt — to adapt (a person or thing) again or (of a person or thing) to adapt again
  • readmit — to allow to enter; grant or afford entrance to: to admit a student to college.
  • readopt — to adopt (a person, procedure, law, etc) again
  • readout — Computers. the output of information from a computer in readable form. Compare printout.
  • rebated — cut off or abridged in some way, as a cross potent formed as a swastika.
  • red ant — any of various reddish ants, especially the Pharaoh ant.
  • red hat — the broad-brimmed official hat of a Roman Catholic cardinal, symbolic of the office or rank of a cardinal.
  • red tai — See under tai.
  • red-tag — to attach a red tag to, as merchandise for special sale.
  • red-wat — stained with blood; bloody.
  • redbait — to denounce or deprecate as a political radical, especially to accuse of being communist.
  • redcoat — (especially during the American Revolution) a British soldier.
  • redraft — a second draft or drawing.
  • redtail — an American hawk with red colouring on its tail
  • related — associated; connected.
  • retaped — a long, narrow strip of linen, cotton, or the like, used for tying garments, binding seams or carpets, etc.
  • retrade — the act or process of buying, selling, or exchanging commodities, at either wholesale or retail, within a country or between countries: domestic trade; foreign trade.
  • retread — to put a new tread on (a worn pneumatic tire casing) either by recapping or by cutting fresh treads in the smooth surface.
  • smarted — to be a source of sharp, local, and usually superficial pain, as a wound.
  • staider — of settled or sedate character; not flighty or capricious.
  • staired — having or consisting of stairs
  • starred — celebrated, prominent, or distinguished; preeminent: a star basketball player; a star reporter.
  • steward — a person who manages another's property or financial affairs; one who administers anything as the agent of another or others.
  • straked — having a strake
  • tancred — 1078?–1112, Norman leader in the first Crusade.
  • tapered — to become smaller or thinner toward one end.
  • tardieu — André Pierre Gabriel Amédée [ahn-drey pyer ga-bree-el a-mey-dey] /ɑ̃ˈdreɪ pyɛr ga briˈɛl a meɪˈdeɪ/ (Show IPA), 1876–1945, French statesman.
  • tardive — appearing or tending to appear late, as in human development or in the treatment of a disease.
  • tarried — to remain or stay, as in a place; sojourn: He tarried in Baltimore on his way to Washington.
  • tarweed — any of several resinous or gummy, composite plants of the genus Grindelia, having solitary flower heads.
  • thrawed — British Dialect. to throw.
  • threads — a fine cord of flax, cotton, or other fibrous material spun out to considerable length, especially when composed of two or more filaments twisted together.
  • thready — consisting of or resembling a thread or threads; fibrous; filamentous.
  • torsade — a twisted cord.
  • tracked — hunted
  • traduce — to speak maliciously and falsely of; slander; defame: to traduce someone's character.
  • tragedy — a lamentable, dreadful, or fatal event or affair; calamity; disaster: stunned by the tragedy of so many deaths.
  • traiked — to become ill or lose one's good health.
  • trailed — to drag or let drag along the ground or other surface; draw or drag along behind.
  • trained — Railroads. a self-propelled, connected group of rolling stock.
  • tramped — to tread or walk with a firm, heavy, resounding step.
  • tranced — a passageway, as a hallway, alley, or the like.
  • trappedtraps, Informal. personal belongings; baggage.
  • trashed — intoxicated; drunk.
  • treader — to set down the foot or feet in walking; step; walk.
  • treadle — a lever or the like worked by continual action of the foot to impart motion to a machine.
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