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7-letter words containing e, t, y

  • fratery — A frater-house.
  • freytag — Gustav [goo s-tahf] /ˈgʊs tɑf/ (Show IPA), 1816–95, German novelist, playwright, and journalist.
  • gadgety — a mechanical contrivance or device; any ingenious article.
  • gaseity — the state of being gaseous
  • gateway — an entrance or passage that may be closed by a gate.
  • getaway — a getting away or fleeing; an escape.
  • gimlety — (rare) gimlet-eyed, piercing, sharp-sighted.
  • grayest — Superlative form of gray.
  • greatly — in or to a great degree; much: greatly improved in health.
  • gretzkyWayne ("The Great One") born 1961, Canadian ice hockey player.
  • greyest — Superlative form of grey.
  • guttery — a place for removing the guts or cleaning the guts of dead animals or fish
  • gypster — gyp1 (def 3).
  • gyrated — Simple past tense and past participle of gyrate.
  • gyrates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of gyrate.
  • hartleyDavid, 1705–57, English physician and philosopher.
  • hastely — (obsolete) Hastily.
  • healthy — possessing or enjoying good health or a sound and vigorous mentality: a healthy body; a healthy mind.
  • heartly — heartily
  • heftily — heavy; weighty: a hefty book.
  • helotry — serfdom; slavery.
  • honesty — the quality or fact of being honest; uprightness and fairness.
  • hot key — an assigned key or sequence of keys programmed to execute a command or perform a specific task in a software application: On Windows computers, the hotkey Ctrl+S can be used to quickly save a file.
  • hyalite — a colorless variety of opal, sometimes transparent like glass, and sometimes whitish and translucent.
  • hydrate — any of a class of compounds containing chemically combined water. In the case of some hydrates, as washing soda, Na 2 CO 3 ⋅10H 2 O, the water is loosely held and is easily lost on heating; in others, as sulfuric acid, SO 3 ⋅H 2 O, or H 2 SO 4 , it is strongly held as water of constitution.
  • impiety — lack of piety; lack of reverence for God or sacred things; irreverence.
  • ineptly — without skill or aptitude for a particular task or assignment; maladroit: He is inept at mechanical tasks. She is inept at dealing with people.
  • inertly — having no inherent power of action, motion, or resistance (opposed to active): inert matter.
  • instyle — (obsolete, transitive) To style.
  • ipseity — Selfhood; individual identity.
  • irately — angry; enraged: an irate customer.
  • isohyet — a line drawn on a map connecting points having equal rainfall at a certain time or for a stated period.
  • isotype — a drawing, diagram, or other symbol that represents a specific quantity of or other fact about the thing depicted: Every isotype of a house on that chart represents a thousand new houses.
  • jitneys — Plural form of jitney.
  • jittery — extremely tense and nervous; jumpy: He's very jittery about the medical checkup.
  • kapteyn — Jacobus Cornelis [yah-koh-bys kawr-ney-lis] /yɑˈkoʊ büs kɔrˈneɪ lɪs/ (Show IPA), 1851–1922, Dutch astronomer.
  • katayev — Valentin Petrovich [vuh-lyin-tyeen pyi-traw-vyich] /və lyɪnˈtyin pyɪˈtrɔ vyɪtʃ/ (Show IPA), 1897–1986, Russian writer.
  • keynote — Music. the note or tone on which a key or system of tones is founded; the tonic.
  • keyslot — a short, curved slot cut into a shaft for a Woodruff key. Compare keyway (def 1).
  • kitteny — of or like a kitten
  • kutenay — a member of a North American Indian people of British Columbia, Montana, and Idaho.
  • kvetchy — Persistently whining or complaining.
  • kyanite — a mineral, aluminum silicate, Al 2 SiO 5 , occurring in blue or greenish bladed triclinic crystals, used as a refractory.
  • kythera — Cythera
  • latency — the state of being latent.
  • lathery — consisting of, covered with, or capable of producing lather.
  • layette — an outfit of clothing, bedding, etc., for a newborn baby.
  • laytime — the period of time allowed by a shipowner to a carrier to carry out cargo loading or discharging operations
  • lengthy — having or being of great length; very long: a lengthy journey.
  • let fly — to move through the air using wings.
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