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7-letter words containing l, a, t, r

  • brotula — any of several chiefly deep-sea fishes of the family Brotulidae.
  • butyral — a type of resin
  • caltrap — Archaic form of caltrop.
  • caltrop — any tropical or subtropical plant of the zygophyllaceous genera Tribulus and Kallstroemia that have spiny burs or bracts
  • calvert — Sir George, 1st Baron Baltimore. ?1580–1632, English statesman; founder of the colony of Maryland
  • carlist — (in Spain) a supporter of Don Carlos or his descendants as the rightful kings of Spain
  • carlita — a female given name.
  • carlota — original name Marie Charlotte Amélie Augustine Victoire Clémentine Léopoldine. 1840–1927, wife of Maximilian; empress of Mexico (1864–67)
  • carlton — a town in N central England, in S Nottinghamshire. Pop: 48 493 (2001)
  • cartels — Plural form of cartel.
  • cartful — the amount a cart can hold
  • castral — of or relating to a camp, esp a military camp
  • catgirl — (chiefly, Japanese fiction) A female fictional character who has a cat's ears, tail or other feline characteristics on an otherwise humanoid body.
  • central — Something that is central is in the middle of a place or area.
  • charlotJean [jeen;; French zhahn] /dʒin;; French ʒɑ̃/ (Show IPA), 1898–1979, U.S. painter, lithographer, and illustrator; born in France and active in Mexico.
  • clairty — Misspelling of clarity.
  • clarity — The clarity of something such as a book or argument is its quality of being well explained and easy to understand.
  • clatter — If you say that people or things clatter somewhere, you mean that they move there noisily.
  • clipart — large collection of simple drawings stored in a computer
  • crustal — of or relating to the earth's crust
  • crystal — A crystal is a small piece of a substance that has formed naturally into a regular symmetrical shape.
  • curtail — If you curtail something, you reduce or limit it.
  • curtals — Plural form of curtal.
  • dartles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dartle.
  • delater — Chiefly Scot. to inform against; denounce or accuse.
  • delator — An accuser; an informer.
  • dextral — of, relating to, or located on the right side, esp of the body; right-hand
  • dilater — One who, or that which, dilates, expands, or enlarges.
  • dilator — Anatomy. a muscle that dilates some cavity of the body.
  • earthly — of or relating to the earth, especially as opposed to heaven; worldly.
  • electra — the daughter of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra. She persuaded her brother Orestes to avenge their father by killing his murderess Clytemnestra and her lover Aegisthus
  • elytral — relating to a beetle's elytra
  • enteral — Involving or passing through the intestine, either naturally via the mouth and oesophagus, or through an artificial opening.
  • enthral — (transitive) To hold spellbound; to bewitch, charm or captivate.
  • entrail — (archaic) To interweave or bind.
  • estrual — pertaining to estrus
  • etailer — An etailer is a person or company that sells products on the Internet.
  • eternal — Lasting or existing forever; without end or beginning.
  • exalter — Someone who exalts.
  • falster — an island in SE Denmark. 198 sq. mi. (513 sq. km).
  • falters — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of falter.
  • fartlek — a training technique, used especially among runners, consisting of bursts of intense effort loosely alternating with less strenuous activity.
  • faulter — (obsolete) One who commits a fault.
  • flatcar — a railroad car consisting of a platform without sides or top.
  • flatter — to make flat.
  • floater — a person or thing that floats.
  • floreat — may (a person, institution, etc) flourish
  • flytrap — firewall machine
  • 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.
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