7-letter words containing i, s, t
- diester — an organic compound that contains two ester groups.
- dieters — Plural form of dieter.
- digests — Plural form of digest.
- digitus — An Ancient Roman unit of length, approximately 0.73 inches.
- diktats — Plural form of diktat.
- dilates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dilate.
- dilutes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dilute.
- dimmest — Superlative form of dim.
- dimwits — Plural form of dimwit.
- dipshit — a stupid or despicable person.
- directs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of direct.
- dirties — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dirty.
- discant — Also, discantus [dis-kan-tuh s] /dɪsˈkæn təs/ (Show IPA). Music. a 13th-century polyphonic style with strict mensural meter in all the voice parts, in contrast to the metrically free organum of the period.
- discept — To debate; to discuss.
- disgest — Obsolete form of digest.
- disgust — to cause loathing or nausea in.
- disject — to scatter; disperse.
- dismast — to deprive (a ship) of masts; break off the masts of.
- disnest — to remove from the nest
- dispart — (now rare) To part, separate.
- disport — to divert or amuse (oneself).
- dispost — (transitive) To eject from a post; to displace.
- dispute — to engage in argument or debate.
- disrate — to reduce to a lower rating or rank.
- disroot — to uproot; dislodge.
- disrupt — to cause disorder or turmoil in: The news disrupted their conference.
- disseat — to unseat.
- dissect — to cut apart (an animal body, plant, etc.) to examine the structure, relation of parts, or the like.
- dissent — to differ in sentiment or opinion, especially from the majority; withhold assent; disagree (often followed by from): Two of the justices dissented from the majority decision.
- dissert — to discourse on a subject.
- distaff — a staff with a cleft end for holding wool, flax, etc., from which the thread is drawn in spinning by hand.
- distain — to discolor; stain; sully.
- distant — far off or apart in space; not near at hand; remote or removed (often followed by from): a distant place; a town three miles distant from here.
- distend — Swell or cause to swell by pressure from inside.
- distent — distended.
- distfix — (programming) ("distributed fixity"?) A description of an operator represented by multiple symbols before, between, and/or after the arguments. The classical example is the C conditional operator, "?:" which is written E1 ? E2 : E3 If E1 is true it returns E2 otherwise it returns E3. Several functional programming languages, e.g. Hope, Haskell, have similar operators ("if E1 then E2 else E3"). getRow:row andColumn:col ofCell:cell is a message with three arguments, row, col, and cell.
- distich — a unit of two lines of verse, usually a self-contained statement; couplet.
- distill — to subject to a process of vaporization and subsequent condensation, as for purification or concentration.
- distome — a genus of digenetic parasitic flatworms having two suckers, one ventral and the other oral
- distort — to twist awry or out of shape; make crooked or deformed: Arthritis had distorted his fingers.
- distrix — the splitting of the ends of hairs
- distune — to cause (an instrument) to be out of tune
- disturb — to interrupt the quiet, rest, peace, or order of; unsettle.
- disturn — (obsolete) To turn aside.
- distyle — having two columns.
- ditches — Plural form of ditch.
- dithers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dither.
- ditmars — Raymond Lee, 1876–1942, U.S. zoologist and author.
- ditsier — Comparative form of ditsy.
- ditties — Plural form of ditty.