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7-letter words containing f, o, t, e

  • offsets — Plural form of offset.
  • offsite — Away from a main location; in a place not owned by a particular organisation.
  • offtake — a pipe or passage for conducting smoke, a current of air, or the like, to an uptake or downtake.
  • oftener — More often.
  • oftenly — (nonstandard) often.
  • outface — to cause to submit by or as if by staring down; face or stare down.
  • outfeat — To surpass in feats.
  • outfeed — to give food to; supply with nourishment: to feed a child.
  • outfeel — to exceed in feeling
  • outfire — (Sussex) A visit by one bonfire society to join in with the celebrations of another.
  • overfat — Having too much fat as a proportion of body mass.
  • overfit — too fit
  • piefort — piedfort.
  • pomfret — any of several scombroid fishes of the family Bramidae, found in the North Atlantic and Pacific.
  • poofter — Extremely Disparaging and Offensive. a contemptuous term used to refer to a male homosexual.
  • profert — an exhibition of a record or paper in open court.
  • redfoot — a fatal disease of newborn lambs of unknown cause in which the horny layers of the feet become separated, exposing the red laminae below
  • refloat — to rest or remain on the surface of a liquid; be buoyant: The hollow ball floated.
  • refront — to put a new front on something
  • rotifer — any microscopic animal of the phylum (or class) Rotifera, found in fresh and salt waters, having one or more rings of cilia on the anterior end.
  • set off — to put (something or someone) in a particular place: to set a vase on a table.
  • set-off — to put (something or someone) in a particular place: to set a vase on a table.
  • softkey — any key on a keyboard, as a function key, that can be programmed.
  • takeoff — a taking or setting off; the leaving of the ground, as in leaping or in beginning a flight in an airplane.
  • tee off — Golf. Also called teeing ground. the starting place, usually a hard mound of earth, at the beginning of play for each hole. a small wooden, plastic, metal, or rubber peg from which the ball is driven, as in teeing off.
  • telford — noting a form of road pavement composed of compacted and rolled stones of various sizes.
  • tenfold — comprising ten parts or members.
  • texinfo — A GNU documentation system that uses a single source file to produce both on-line information and printed output. You can read the on-line information, known as an "Info file", with an Info documentation-reading program. By convention, Texinfo source file names end with a ".texi" or ".texinfo" extension. You can write and format Texinfo files into Info files within GNU Emacs, and read them using the Emacs Info reader. If you do not have Emacs, you can format Texinfo files into Info files using "makeinfo" and read them using "info". TeX is used to typeset Texinfo files for printing. Texinfo is available from your nearest GNU archive site.
  • thereof — of that or it.
  • tie off — to make (a rope or line) fast
  • torfaen — a county borough of SE Wales, created in 1996 from part of Gwent. Administrative centre: Pontypool. Pop: 90 700 (2003 est). Area: 290 sq km (112 sq miles)
  • torpefy — to make torpid
  • torrefy — to subject to fire or intense heat; parch, roast, or scorch.
  • trefoil — any of numerous plants belonging to the genus Trifolium, of the legume family, having usually digitate leaves of three leaflets and reddish, purple, yellow, or white flower heads, comprising the common clovers.
  • troffer — a trough-shaped reflector holding one or more fluorescent lamps.
  • unoften — (usually preceded by 'not') infrequently
  • webfoot — a foot with the toes joined by a web.
  • woofter — (slang) A male homosexual.
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