0%

7-letter words containing f, a, t

  • defiant — If you say that someone is defiant, you mean they show aggression or independence by refusing to obey someone.
  • deflate — If you deflate someone or something, you take away their confidence or make them seem less important.
  • distaff — a staff with a cleft end for holding wool, flax, etc., from which the thread is drawn in spinning by hand.
  • drafted — Simple past tense and past participle of draft.
  • draftee — a person who is drafted into military service. Compare enlistee (def 1).
  • drafter — a drawing, sketch, or design.
  • ecofact — (achaeology) A biological artifact not altered by humans, but which may be indicative of human occupation.
  • edifact — ISO 9735:1988
  • engraft — To insert, as a scion of one tree or plant into another, for the purpose of propagation; graft onto a plant.
  • face it — accept reality
  • faceted — one of the small, polished plane surfaces of a cut gem.
  • factful — something that actually exists; reality; truth: Your fears have no basis in fact.
  • factice — a soft rubbery material made by reacting sulphur or sulphur chloride with vegetable oil
  • faction — a form of writing or filmmaking that treats real people or events as if they were fictional or uses them as an integral part of a fictional account.
  • factive — (of a verb, adjective, or noun phrase) presupposing the truth of an embedded sentence that serves as complement, as realize in I didn't realize that he had left, which presupposes that it is true that he had left.
  • factoid — an insignificant or trivial fact.
  • factors — one of the elements contributing to a particular result or situation: Poverty is only one of the factors in crime.
  • factory — a building or group of buildings with facilities for the manufacture of goods.
  • factual — of or relating to facts; concerning facts: factual accuracy.
  • factums — Plural form of factum.
  • facture — the act, process, or manner of making anything; construction.
  • faculty — an ability, natural or acquired, for a particular kind of action: a faculty for making friends easily.
  • faddist — a person following a fad or given to fads, as one who seeks and adheres briefly to a passing variety of unusual diets, beliefs, etc.
  • fadeout — A gradual disappearance.
  • faggots — Plural form of faggot.
  • faggoty — Extremely Disparaging and Offensive. a contemptuous term used to refer to a male homosexual.
  • fagoted — Simple past tense and past participle of fagot.
  • fagotto — a bassoon
  • faileth — (archaic) Third-person singular present simple form of 'fail'.
  • fainest — gladly; willingly: He fain would accept.
  • fainted — lacking brightness, vividness, clearness, loudness, strength, etc.: a faint light; a faint color; a faint sound.
  • fainter — lacking brightness, vividness, clearness, loudness, strength, etc.: a faint light; a faint color; a faint sound.
  • faintly — lacking brightness, vividness, clearness, loudness, strength, etc.: a faint light; a faint color; a faint sound.
  • fairest — free from bias, dishonesty, or injustice: a fair decision; a fair judge.
  • faithed — having faith or a faith
  • faitour — impostor; fake.
  • fajitas — a thin strip of marinated and grilled meat.
  • falcata — A sword in pre-Roman Iberia having a concave edge on the blade.
  • falcate — curved like a scythe or sickle; hooked; falciform.
  • fall to — to drop or descend under the force of gravity, as to a lower place through loss or lack of support.
  • falleth — Archaic third-person singular form of fall.
  • fallout — the settling to the ground of airborne particles ejected into the atmosphere from the earth by explosions, eruptions, forest fires, etc., especially such settling from nuclear explosions (radioactive fallout) Compare rainout.
  • falsest — not true or correct; erroneous: a false statement.
  • falsity — the quality or condition of being false; incorrectness; untruthfulness; treachery.
  • falster — an island in SE Denmark. 198 sq. mi. (513 sq. km).
  • falters — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of falter.
  • fan out — spread
  • fan-out — any device for producing a current of air by the movement of a broad surface or a number of such surfaces.
  • fan-tan — Also, fan tan. Also called parliament, sevens. Cards. a game in which the players play their sevens and other cards forming sequences in the same suits as their sevens, the winner being the player who first runs out of cards.
  • fanatic — a person with an extreme and uncritical enthusiasm or zeal, as in religion or politics.
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?