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8-letter words containing f, l, a, t

  • faithful — strict or thorough in the performance of duty: a faithful worker.
  • falconet — any of several small Asian falcons, especially of the genus Microhierax.
  • faldetta — a hooded cape worn by Maltese women
  • fall out — an act or instance of falling or dropping from a higher to a lower place or position.
  • fallouts — Plural form of fallout.
  • falmouth — a seaport in S Cornwall, in SW England.
  • falsetto — an unnaturally or artificially high-pitched voice or register, especially in a man.
  • falstaffSir John, the jovial, fat knight of brazen assurance and few scruples in Shakespeare's Henry IV, Parts 1 and 2, and The Merry Wives of Windsor.
  • faltboat — a small boat having a collapsible wooden frame covered with waterproof cloth or plastic.
  • faltered — to hesitate or waver in action, purpose, intent, etc.; give way: Her courage did not falter at the prospect of hardship.
  • familist — the subordination of the personal interests and prerogatives of an individual to the values and demands of the family: Familism characterized the patriarchal family.
  • fan belt — (in automotive vehicles) a belt, driven by the crankshaft of an engine, that turns a fan for drawing cooling air through the radiator.
  • fanlight — a window over a door or another window, especially one having the form of a semicircle or of half an ellipse.
  • fantails — Plural form of fantail.
  • faq list — frequently asked question
  • far left — of or relating to the extreme left wing
  • farolito — luminaria.
  • fastball — a pitch thrown at or near a pitcher's maximum velocity.
  • fat cell — a cell in loose connective tissue that is specialized for the synthesis and storage of fat.
  • fat lamb — a lamb bred for its tender meat, esp for export trade
  • fat tail — a tail on a probability distribution that indicates a high level of risk
  • fatalism — the acceptance of all things and events as inevitable; submission to fate: Her fatalism helped her to face death with stoic calm.
  • fatalist — the acceptance of all things and events as inevitable; submission to fate: Her fatalism helped her to face death with stoic calm.
  • fatality — a disaster resulting in death.
  • fateless — Devoid of fate.
  • fatherly — of, like, or befitting a father.
  • fattrels — a collection of ribbon-ends
  • faultful — Full of faults or sins.
  • faultier — having faults or defects; imperfect.
  • faultily — In a faulty manner.
  • faulting — a defect or imperfection; flaw; failing: a fault in the brakes; a fault in one's character.
  • faunlets — Plural form of faunlet.
  • fauteuil — French Furniture. an upholstered armchair, especially one with open sides.
  • fayalite — the iron end member of the olivine group, Fe 2 SiO 4 .
  • feastful — festive, occupied with feasting
  • fee tail — a charge or payment for professional services: a doctor's fee.
  • felicita — a female given name, form of Felicia.
  • fellated — to perform fellatio on.
  • fellatio — oral stimulation of the penis, especially to orgasm.
  • fellator — to perform fellatio on.
  • felt hat — a soft hat made of felt
  • femality — Femaleness.
  • fentanyl — a synthetic, short-acting narcotic analgesic and sedative, C 22 H 28 N 2 O, used pharmacologically in anesthesia and neuroleptanalgesia, and also as an illicit drug: Medics quickly administered fentanyl to the injured soldiers. Drug dealers are lacing heroin with fentanyl.
  • festally — In a festal/festive manner.
  • festival — a day or time of religious or other celebration, marked by feasting, ceremonies, or other observances: the festival of Christmas; a Roman festival.
  • fetialis — (in Ancient Rome) a priest who was responsible for the sanctioning of treaties and making declarations of war or peace
  • filament — a very fine thread or threadlike structure; a fiber or fibril: filaments of gold.
  • filatory — a machine for spinning thread
  • filature — the act of forming into threads.
  • filiated — Simple past tense and past participle of filiate.
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