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7-letter words containing e, t, h, i

  • neolith — a Neolithic stone implement.
  • nighest — (archaic) Superlative form of nigh.
  • nighted — Dark; clouded.
  • nighter — (only in combinations) Someone or something who does something for a certain number of nights.
  • nightie — a nightgown.
  • nitches — Plural form of nitch.
  • nitchie — a contemptuous term used to refer to a North-American Indian.
  • othniel — a judge of Israel. Judges 3:9.
  • outhire — to hire out
  • overhit — to hit too hard or too far, as in tennis.
  • penrith — a market town in NW England, in Cumbria. Pop: 14 471 (2001)
  • peshito — the standard translation of the Old and New Testaments in ancient Syriac
  • pettish — easily irritated, sulky
  • philter — a potion, charm, or drug supposed to cause the person taking it to fall in love, usually with some specific person.
  • philtre — philter.
  • pightle — a small enclosure; paddock
  • pitched — sound: of a certain pitch
  • pitcherMolly (Mary Ludwig Hays McCauley) 1754–1832, American Revolutionary heroine.
  • pithead — a mine entrance and the surrounding area.
  • potiche — a vase or jar, as of porcelain, with a rounded or polygonal body narrowing at the top.
  • prithee — pray thee; please
  • rebirth — a new or second birth: the rebirth of the soul.
  • refight — to fight (someone or something) again
  • relight — to ignite or cause to ignite again
  • resight — the power or faculty of seeing; perception of objects by use of the eyes; vision.
  • rethink — the act of reconsidering.
  • rhaetia — an ancient Roman province in central Europe, comprising what is now E Switzerland and a part of the Tyrol: later extended to the Danube.
  • rhaetic — of or relating to a series of rocks formed in the late Triassic period
  • rhetian — of or relating to Rhaetia.
  • 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.
  • righted — in accordance with what is good, proper, or just: right conduct.
  • righten — to set right
  • righter — a just claim or title, whether legal, prescriptive, or moral: You have a right to say what you please.
  • routhie — abundant, plentiful, or well filled
  • sheitan — Ash-Shaytān.
  • sheitel — a wig worn by certain Orthodox Jewish married women in keeping with an old rabbinical precept that forbids a woman to leave her hair uncovered in the sight of a man other than her husband.
  • sheltie — Shetland pony.
  • shemite — a Semite.
  • shifter — a person or thing that shifts.
  • shiites — a member of one of the two great religious divisions of Islam that regards Ali, the son-in-law of Muhammad, as the legitimate successor of Muhammad, and disregards the three caliphs who succeeded him.
  • shiʿite — a member of one of the two great religious divisions of Islam that regards Ali, the son-in-law of Muhammad, as the legitimate successor of Muhammad, and disregards the three caliphs who succeeded him.
  • shootie — a woman's shoe that reaches, covers, or extends just above the ankle.
  • shortie — a person of less than average stature (sometimes used as a disparaging and offensive term of address).
  • sighted — having functional vision; not blind.
  • sighter — the power or faculty of seeing; perception of objects by use of the eyes; vision.
  • sithole — Ndabaningi (əndabaˈnɪŋɡɪ). 1920–2000, Zimbabwean clergyman and politician; leader of the Zimbabwe African National Union (1963–74). He was one of the negotiators of the internal settlement (1978) to pave the way for Black majority rule in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe)
  • sleight — skill; dexterity.
  • slither — to slide down or along a surface, especially unsteadily, from side to side, or with some friction or noise: The box slithered down the chute.
  • smithed — a worker in metal.
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