7-letter words containing f, l, t
- flirted — Simple past tense and past participle of flirt.
- flirter — to court triflingly or act amorously without serious intentions; play at love; coquet.
- fliting — a dispute or wrangle; scolding.
- flitted — to move lightly and swiftly; fly, dart, or skim along: bees flitting from flower to flower.
- flitter — a fritter or pancake.
- floated — Simple past tense and past participle of float.
- floatel — a boat or ship that serves as a hotel, sometimes permanently moored to a dock.
- floater — a person or thing that floats.
- flokati — a thick, woolen rug with a shaggy pile, originally handwoven in Greece.
- floreat — may (a person, institution, etc) flourish
- florets — Plural form of floret.
- florist — a retailer of flowers, ornamental plants, etc.
- floruit — he (or she) flourished: used to indicate the period during which a person flourished, especially when the exact birth and death dates are unknown. Abbreviation: fl., flor.
- flotage — an act of floating.
- flotant — (in heraldry) flying in the air
- flotels — Plural form of flotel.
- flotsam — the part of the wreckage of a ship and its cargo found floating on the water. Compare jetsam, lagan.
- flotson — Dated form of flotsam.
- flouted — Simple past tense and past participle of flout.
- flouter — A person who flouts.
- floweth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of flow.
- fluctus — (astronomy, geology) An area covered by outflow from a volcano.
- fluster — to put into a state of agitated confusion: His constant criticism flustered me.
- fluters — Plural form of fluter.
- flutina — an early type of accordion, similar in internal construction to a concertina
- fluting — a musical wind instrument consisting of a tube with a series of fingerholes or keys, in which the wind is directed against a sharp edge, either directly, as in the modern transverse flute, or through a flue, as in the recorder.
- flutist — a flute player.
- flutter — to wave, flap, or toss about: Banners fluttered in the breeze.
- fly net — a net or fringe to protect a horse from flies or other insects.
- fly out — to move through the air using wings.
- flybelt — an area having a large number of tsetse flies.
- flyboat — a small, fast boat.
- flypast — flyby (def 2a).
- flytier — a person who makes artificial lures for fly-fishing.
- flyting — to dispute; wrangle; scold; jeer.
- flytrap — firewall machine
- folates — Plural form of folate.
- foldout — a page larger than the trim size of a magazine or book, folded one or more times so as not to extend beyond the pages; gatefold.
- foliate — covered with or having leaves.
- fontlet — a small fountain
- footled — Simple past tense and past participle of footle.
- footler — One who footles, foolish trifler.
- footlet — a low sock for women covering either the whole foot below the ankle or only the toes, worn for protection or warmth.
- fortlet — a small fort
- foulest — grossly offensive to the senses; disgustingly loathsome; noisome: a foul smell.
- foxtail — the tail of a fox.
- fractal — a geometrical or physical structure having an irregular or fragmented shape at all scales of measurement between a greatest and smallest scale such that certain mathematical or physical properties of the structure, as the perimeter of a curve or the flow rate in a porous medium, behave as if the dimensions of the structure (fractal dimensions) are greater than the spatial dimensions.
- frailty — the quality or state of being frail.
- fretful — disposed or quick to fret; irritable or peevish.
- fritfly — a small black dipterous fly, Oscinella frit, whose larvae are destructive to barley, wheat, rye, oats, etc: family Chloropidae