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

  • excreta — Waste matter discharged from the body, especially feces and urine.
  • excrete — (of a living organism or cell) separate and expel as waste (a substance, especially a product of metabolism).
  • extract — Remove or take out, especially by effort or force.
  • facture — the act, process, or manner of making anything; construction.
  • fetcher — to go and bring back; return with; get: to go up a hill to fetch a pail of water.
  • fracted — broken; having a part displaced.
  • frechet — René Maurice [ruh-ney maw-rees] /rəˈneɪ mɔˈris/ (Show IPA), 1878–1973, French mathematician.
  • fructed — (of a tree or other plant) represented as bearing fruit, seeds, or the like: an apple tree vert fructed gules.
  • furcate — forked; branching.
  • gertcha — get out of here!
  • hatcher — to bring forth (young) from the egg.
  • hectare — a unit of surface, or land, measure equal to 100 ares, or 10,000 square meters: equivalent to 2.471 acres. Abbreviation: ha.
  • hectors — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of hector.
  • 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
  • lacerta — a small faint constellation in the N hemisphere, part of which is crossed by the Milky Way, lying between Cygnus and Andromeda
  • lautrec — Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri.
  • lectern — a reading desk in a church on which the Bible rests and from which the lessons are read during the church service.
  • lectors — Plural form of lector.
  • lecture — a speech read or delivered before an audience or class, especially for instruction or to set forth some subject: a lecture on Picasso's paintings.
  • lecturn — Misspelling of lectern.
  • leuctra — a town in ancient Greece, in Boeotia: Thebans defeated Spartans here 371 b.c.
  • locater — a person who locates something.
  • matcher — a person or thing that equals or resembles another in some respect.
  • matrice — Obsolete form of matrix.
  • meercat — Alt form meerkat.
  • mercast — a broadcasting system used by U.S. agencies to deliver messages to government-operated ships.
  • merchet — (obsolete) In Middle Ages England, a fine paid to a lord on a daughter's marriage, in recompense for the loss of a worker.
  • 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
  • nectary — Botany. an organ or part that secretes nectar.
  • neritic — of or relating to the region of water lying directly above the sublittoral zone of the sea bottom.
  • netrock — /net'rok/ (IBM) A flame; used especially on VNET, IBM's internal corporate network.
  • notcher — One who makes notches.
  • noticer — Someone who notices.
  • obrecht — Jacob [yah-kawp] /ˈyɑ kɔp/ (Show IPA), 1430–1505, Dutch composer and conductor.
  • ocreate — having an ocrea or ocreae; sheathed.
  • octamer — an eight-molecule complex.
  • october — the tenth month of the year, containing 31 days. Abbreviation: Oct.
  • orectic — of or relating to desire; appetitive.
  • outrace — to race or run faster than: The deer outraced its pursuers.
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