7-letter words containing f, i, e
- fleein' — drunk
- fleeing — Present participle of flee.
- fleming — Sir Alexander, 1881–1955, Scottish bacteriologist and physician: discoverer of penicillin 1928; Nobel Prize in Medicine 1945.
- flemish — of or relating to Flanders, its people, or their language.
- flexile — flexible; pliant; tractable; adaptable.
- flexing — to bend, as a part of the body: He flexed his arms to show off his muscles.
- flexion — the act of bending.
- flicked — a sudden light blow or tap, as with a whip or the finger: She gave the horse a flick with her riding crop.
- flicker — to burn unsteadily; shine with a wavering light: The candle flickered in the wind and went out.
- flinder — a piece or fragment
- flinger — a person or thing that flings.
- flinted — a hard stone, a form of silica resembling chalcedony but more opaque, less pure, and less lustrous.
- flipped — to toss or put in motion with a sudden impulse, as with a snap of a finger and thumb, especially so as to cause to turn over in the air: to flip a coin.
- flipper — a broad, flat limb, as of a seal or whale, especially adapted for swimming.
- flirted — Simple past tense and past participle of flirt.
- flirter — to court triflingly or act amorously without serious intentions; play at love; coquet.
- flitted — to move lightly and swiftly; fly, dart, or skim along: bees flitting from flower to flower.
- flitter — a fritter or pancake.
- flivver — Older Slang. an automobile, especially one that is small, inexpensive, and old.
- floosie — a gaudily dressed, usually immoral woman, especially a prostitute.
- floozie — a gaudily dressed, usually immoral woman, especially a prostitute.
- flossie — a female given name, form of Florence.
- flueric — fluidics.
- fluider — a substance, as a liquid or gas, that is capable of flowing and that changes its shape at a steady rate when acted upon by a force tending to change its shape.
- flulike — Resembling influenza.
- flunkie — Alternative form of flunky.
- fluxive — flowing; fluid; variable
- flytier — a person who makes artificial lures for fly-fishing.
- foamier — Comparative form of foamy.
- fodient — Fitted for, or relating to, digging.
- foggier — Comparative form of foggy.
- foglike — Resembling a fog or some aspect of it.
- foibles — A minor weakness or eccentricity in someone's character.
- foilage — Obsolete or nonstandard spelling of foliage.
- foilers — Plural form of foiler.
- foisted — to force upon or impose fraudulently or unjustifiably (usually followed by on or upon): to foist inferior merchandise on a customer.
- foister — One who foists; a falsifier.
- foliage — the leaves of a plant, collectively; leafage.
- foliate — covered with or having leaves.
- folioed — Simple past tense and past participle of folio.
- foliole — a leaflet, as of a compound leaf.
- foliose — Botany. leafy.
- folkies — Plural form of folkie.
- follies — the state or quality of being foolish; lack of understanding or sense.
- fomites — any agent, as clothing or bedding, that is capable of absorbing and transmitting the infecting organism of a disease.
- foodies — Plural form of foodie.
- footier — poor; worthless; paltry.
- footsie — Sometimes, footsies. the act of flirting or sharing a surreptitious intimacy.
- foreign — of, relating to, or derived from another country or nation; not native: foreign cars.
- forelie — to lie in front of