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7-letter words containing e, u, t, a

  • auteuil — a former town, now part of Paris, France: noted for residences of Boileau, Talleyrand, Molière, La Fontaine, and other eminent people.
  • auteurs — Plural form of auteur.
  • autocue — An Autocue is a device used by people speaking on television or at a public event, which displays words for them to read.
  • autopen — a mechanical device used to produce imitation signatures
  • auxetic — something that promotes auxesis
  • ayuthea — a city in central Thailand, on the Chao Phraya: former national capital.
  • azurite — an azure-blue mineral associated with copper deposits. It is a source of copper. Composition: copper carbonate. Formula: Cu3(CO3)2(OH)2. Crystal structure: monoclinic
  • baguets — Plural form of baguet.
  • ballute — a type of inflatable device resembling a cross between a parachute and a balloon, designed to slow descent rapidly
  • balteus — (on an Ionic capital) the horizontal band connecting the volutes on either side.
  • banquet — A banquet is a grand formal dinner.
  • bateaux — Also, batteau. Nautical. Chiefly Canadian and Southern U.S.. a small, flat-bottomed rowboat used on rivers. a half-decked, sloop-rigged boat used for fishing on Chesapeake Bay; skipjack. (in some regions) a scow.
  • bateful — (obsolete) Exciting contention; contentious.
  • batteau — bateau (def 1).
  • batture — A sea bed or a river bed that has been raised or elevated.
  • battute — a beat.
  • batuque — a Brazilian round dance of African origin.
  • bautzen — a town in E Germany, in Saxony: site of an indecisive battle in 1813 between Napoleon's army and an allied army of Russians and Prussians. Pop: 42 160 (2003 est)
  • bauxite — Bauxite is a clay-like substance from which aluminium is obtained.
  • beat up — If someone beats a person up, they hit or kick the person many times.
  • beat-up — Informal. dilapidated; in poor condition from use: a beat-up old jalopy.
  • beautie — Obsolete spelling of beauty.
  • bleaunt — a short tunic or blouse, worn in the Middle Ages.
  • boutade — an outburst; sally
  • bullate — puckered or blistered in appearance
  • bursate — resembling or containing a bursa
  • cajeput — cajuput
  • calumet — a long-stemmed ceremonial pipe, smoked by North American Indians as a token of peace, at sacrifices, etc.
  • capture — If you capture someone or something, you catch them, especially in a war.
  • capulet — the family name of Juliet in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet
  • caquetà — the Japurá River from its source in Colombia to the border with Brazil
  • catechu — a water-soluble astringent resinous substance obtained from any of certain tropical plants, esp the leguminous tree Acacia catechu of S Asia, and used in medicine, tanning, and dyeing
  • catouse — New England. a noisy disturbance; commotion.
  • caudate — having a tail or a tail-like appendage
  • causate — (philosophy) The effect of a cause.
  • causeth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of cause.
  • cautery — the coagulation of blood or destruction of body tissue by cauterizing
  • centaur — In classical mythology, a centaur is a creature with the head, arms, and upper body of a man, and the body and legs of a horse.
  • chanute — a town in SE Kansas.
  • chateau — A château is a large country house or castle in France.
  • chuleta — a cutlet or chop.
  • cluebat — (computing slang) A bat (club) with which someone clueless is (figuratively or in one's imagination) struck.
  • cocteau — Jean (ʒɑ̃). 1889–1963, French dramatist, novelist, poet, critic, designer, and film director. His works include the novel Les Enfants terribles (1929) and the play La Machine infernale (1934)
  • couteau — a large two-edged knife used formerly as a weapon
  • creatur — Obsolete spelling of creature.
  • cuneate — wedge-shaped: cuneate leaves are attached at the narrow end
  • cuprate — (inorganic chemistry) Any of several non-stoichiometric compounds, of general formula XYCumOn, many of which are superconductors.
  • curated — Chiefly British. a member of the clergy employed to assist a rector or vicar.
  • curates — Plural form of curate.
  • curtate — shortened
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