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7-letter words containing e, s

  • absolve — If a report or investigation absolves someone from blame or responsibility, it formally states that he or she is not guilty or is not to blame.
  • abusage — wrong or improper use
  • abusers — Plural form of abuser.
  • abusive — Someone who is abusive behaves in a cruel and violent way towards other people.
  • abustle — Showing much activity. (First attested in the mid 20th century.).
  • abysses — Plural form of abyss.
  • accedes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of accede.
  • accents — Plural form of accent.
  • accepts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of accept.
  • accrues — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of accrue.
  • accurse — to curse or consign to damnation, perdition, or misery
  • accused — You can use the accused to refer to a person or a group of people charged with a crime or on trial for it.
  • accusee — One who is accused.
  • accuser — An accuser is a person who says that another person has done something wrong, especially that he or she has committed a crime.
  • accuses — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of accuse.
  • acerose — shaped like a needle, as pine leaves
  • acerous — having no antennae.
  • acetals — Plural form of acetal.
  • acetose — Sour like vinegar; acetous.
  • acetous — containing, producing, or resembling acetic acid or vinegar
  • achates — Aeneas' faithful companion in Virgil's Aeneid
  • achenes — Plural form of achene.
  • acheson — Dean (Gooderham). 1893–1971, US lawyer and statesman: secretary of state (1949–53) under President Truman
  • achiest — Superlative form of achy.
  • acinose — consisting of acini.
  • acmeism — a school of early 20th-century Russian poetry whose practitioners were strongly opposed to the vagueness of symbolism and strove for absolute clarity of expression through precise, concrete imagery.
  • acquest — an acquisition
  • actives — engaged in action; characterized by energetic work, participation, etc.; busy: an active life.
  • actress — An actress is a woman whose job is acting in plays or films.
  • aculeus — a prickle or spine, such as the thorn of a rose
  • acumens — keen insight; shrewdness: remarkable acumen in business matters.
  • acutest — Superlative form of acute.
  • addaxes — Plural form of addax.
  • addends — Plural form of addend.
  • address — Your address is the number of the house, flat, or apartment and the name of the street and the town where you live or work.
  • addrest — (obsolete) Simple past tense and past participle of address.
  • adduces — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of adduce.
  • adenese — Adeni.
  • adheres — Stick fast to (a surface or substance).
  • adipose — of, resembling, or containing fat; fatty
  • adjures — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of adjure.
  • admetus — a king of Thessaly, one of the Argonauts, who was married to Alcestis
  • admires — to regard with wonder, pleasure, or approval.
  • admixes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of admix.
  • adorers — Plural form of adorer.
  • adpress — to press together
  • adspeak — the kind of language or jargon used in advertising or in advertisements
  • adusted — (obsolete) burnt; adust.
  • advents — Plural form of advent.
  • adverbs — any member of a class of words that function as modifiers of verbs or clauses, and in some languages, as Latin and English, as modifiers of adjectives, other adverbs, or adverbial phrases, as very in very nice, much in much more impressive, and tomorrow in She'll write to you tomorrow. They relate to what they modify by indicating place (I promise to be there), time (Do your homework now!), manner (She sings beautifully), circumstance (He accidentally dropped the glass when the bell rang), degree (I'm very happy to see you), or cause (I draw, although badly). See also sentence adverb.
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