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7-letter words containing f, r, o

  • offerer — to present for acceptance or rejection; proffer: He offered me a cigarette.
  • offeror — to present for acceptance or rejection; proffer: He offered me a cigarette.
  • officer — a person who holds a position of rank or authority in the army, navy, air force, or any similar organization, especially one who holds a commission.
  • offramp — Alternative spelling of off-ramp.
  • oftener — More often.
  • on fire — a state, process, or instance of combustion in which fuel or other material is ignited and combined with oxygen, giving off light, heat, and flame.
  • on form — If you say that someone is on form, you think that they are performing their usual activity very well.
  • orifice — an opening or aperture, as of a tube or pipe; a mouthlike opening or hole; mouth; vent.
  • ourself — Used instead of “ ourselves, ” typically when “ we ” refers to people in general rather than a definite group of people.
  • out for — making a determined effort to get or do
  • outfire — (Sussex) A visit by one bonfire society to join in with the celebrations of another.
  • outform — (obsolete) external appearance.
  • overfar — too far
  • overfat — Having too much fat as a proportion of body mass.
  • overfit — too fit
  • overfly — to fly over (a specified area, territory, country, etc.): The plane lost its way and overflew foreign territory.
  • oviform — having a shape resembling that of an egg; egg-shaped; ovoid.
  • oxfords — a pair of stout laced shoes with low heels
  • pay for — to settle (a debt, obligation, etc.), as by transferring money or goods, or by doing something: Please pay your bill.
  • perform — to carry out; execute; do: to perform miracles.
  • piefort — piedfort.
  • piffero — a type of small rustic oboe from Italy
  • 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.
  • pop for — to make a short, quick, explosive sound: The cork popped.
  • porifer — a member of the phylum Porifera
  • preform — to form beforehand.
  • proface — much good may it do you!
  • profane — characterized by irreverence or contempt for God or sacred principles or things; irreligious.
  • profert — an exhibition of a record or paper in open court.
  • profess — to lay claim to, often insincerely; pretend to: He professed extreme regret.
  • proffer — to put before a person for acceptance; offer.
  • profile — the outline or contour of the human face, especially the face viewed from one side.
  • profumo — John (Dennis). 1915–2006 British Conservative politician; secretary of state for war (1960–63). He resigned after a scandal that threatened the government of Harold Macmillan
  • profuse — spending or giving freely and in large amount, often to excess; extravagant (often followed by in): profuse praise.
  • proofer — evidence sufficient to establish a thing as true, or to produce belief in its truth.
  • propfan — Aeronautics. a turbojet having a turbine-driven propeller that operates completely outside the jet engine.
  • prosify — to write or make into prose (esp of a dull nature)
  • radfordArthur William, 1896–1973, U.S. admiral: chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff 1953–57.
  • re-form — When an organization, group, or shape re-forms, or when someone re-forms it, it is created again after a period during which it did not exist or existed in a different form.
  • re-roof — the external upper covering of a house or other building.
  • red fox — a fox, Vulpes vulpes, usually having orangish-red to reddish-brown fur.
  • 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
  • redford — Robert. born 1936, US film actor and director. His films include (as actor) Barefoot in the Park (1966), Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969), The Sting (1973), All the President's Men (1976), Up Close and Personal (1996), and (as director) Ordinary People (1980), A River Runs Through It (1992), and The Horse Whisperer (1998)
  • refloat — to rest or remain on the surface of a liquid; be buoyant: The hollow ball floated.
  • reflood — to flood again
  • refocus — a central point, as of attraction, attention, or activity: The need to prevent a nuclear war became the focus of all diplomatic efforts.
  • reforge — to forge again
  • reforms — the improvement or amendment of what is wrong, corrupt, unsatisfactory, etc.: social reform; spelling reform.
  • refound — to come upon by chance; meet with: He found a nickel in the street.
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