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9-letter words containing e, s, t, r, p

  • sportless — without any sport
  • sportsmen — a man who engages in sports, especially in some open-air sport, as hunting, fishing, racing, etc.
  • sportster — a sports car.
  • sporulate — to produce spores.
  • spot rate — trading: immediate price
  • spreathed — sore; chapped
  • springlet — a small spring of water.
  • sprintnet — A public packet-switched network using the ITU-T X.25 protocols, that provides dial-up access to services like Delphi, Portal, GEnie and Compuserve.
  • spymaster — an espionage agent who directs a network of subordinate agents.
  • st-pierre — town in NW Martinique, West Indies, on the site of a city destroyed (1902) by eruption of Mount Pelée: pop. 5,000
  • st-tropez — commune and seaside resort in SE France, on the Mediterranean: pop. 5,000
  • stairstep — a step in a staircase.
  • stampeder — a sudden, frenzied rush or headlong flight of a herd of frightened animals, especially cattle or horses.
  • step turn — a turn in which a skier lifts one ski from the snow, faces the ski slightly outward in the direction to be turned, sets it down, and brings the other ski around so that both skis are parallel.
  • stepchair — a set of steps folding into a chair.
  • sternport — an opening or window in the stern of ship
  • sternpost — an upright member rising from the after end of a keel; a rudderpost or propeller post.
  • stonecrop — any plant of the genus Sedum, especially a mosslike herb, S. acre, having small, fleshy leaves and yellow flowers, frequently growing on rocks and walls.
  • stop over — stay overnight on a journey
  • stoppered — a person or thing that stops.
  • store pig — a pig that has not yet been weaned and weighs less than 40 kg
  • storeship — a government-owned ship that carries supplies to a naval fleet
  • strapless — without a strap or straps.
  • strapline — a subheading in a newspaper or magazine article or in any advertisement
  • strike up — to deal a blow or stroke to (a person or thing), as with the fist, a weapon, or a hammer; hit.
  • stroppers — any of several devices for sharpening razors, especially a strip of leather or other flexible material.
  • sulphuret — to treat or combine with sulphur
  • superatom — a cluster of atoms behaving in certain ways like a single atom
  • superbity — pride
  • superbrat — an exceptionally unpleasant or bratty person, someone who is very much a brat
  • supercity — a large, heavily populated urban area that includes several cities; megalopolis.
  • supercrat — a high-ranking bureaucrat, especially one of cabinet rank.
  • supercute — very cute
  • superette — a grocery store with some of the self-service features of a supermarket.
  • superfast — very or extremely fast
  • superheat — the state of being superheated.
  • supermart — a large self-service store selling food and household supplies
  • supermoto — a form of motorcycle racing in which powerful motorbikes are raced over a circuit that is part tarmac and part dirt
  • supernate — a supernatant liquid
  • superport — a deepwater port, often one built offshore, capable of accommodating very large ships, especially supertankers of 100,000 tons or more.
  • supersalt — a salt with an excess of acid over base
  • supersoft — exceptionally soft
  • superstar — a person, as a performer or athlete, who enjoys wide recognition, is esteemed for exceptional talent, and is eagerly sought after for his or her services.
  • superstud — a highly virile man
  • supertalk — Silicon Beach Software. A superset of HyperTalk used in SuperCard.
  • supertask — a paradox resulting from the notion that a task requiring an infinite number of steps could be performed in a finite time by halving the duration of each step.
  • superthin — extremely thin
  • supertram — a tram with greater capacity and speed than conventional trams
  • supporter — a person or thing that supports.
  • suppurate — to produce or discharge pus, as a wound; maturate.
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