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7-letter words containing l, e, t, r, p

  • apteral — (esp of a classical temple) not having columns at the sides
  • droplet — a little drop.
  • let rip — to cut or tear apart in a rough or vigorous manner: to rip open a seam; to rip up a sheet.
  • pantler — a pantry servant
  • partlet — a garment for the neck and shoulders, usually ruffled and having a collar, worn in the 16th century.
  • pelters — strong criticism or verbal abuse
  • perlite — a volcanic glass in which concentric fractures impart a distinctive structure resembling masses of small spheroids, used as a plant growth medium.
  • persalt — (in a series of salts of a given metal or group) the salt in which the metal or group has a high, or the highest apparent, valence.
  • petrale — a variety of flounder, native to the Pacific coast of North America and commonly caught for food
  • peytrel — the part of a horse's harness or the protective part that shields its chest
  • philter — a potion, charm, or drug supposed to cause the person taking it to fall in love, usually with some specific person.
  • philtre — philter.
  • plaiter — a person who plaits something such as wool, hair, or threads
  • planter — a person who plants.
  • plaster — a composition, as of lime or gypsum, sand, water, and sometimes hair or other fiber, applied in a pasty form to walls, ceilings, etc., and allowed to harden and dry.
  • platter — a large, shallow dish, usually elliptical in shape, for holding and serving food, especially meat or fish.
  • pleater — a fold of definite, even width made by doubling cloth or the like upon itself and pressing or stitching it in place.
  • plectra — plectrum.
  • plotter — a person or thing that plots.
  • plowter — to work or play in water or mud; dabble
  • poitrel — a breastplate, specifically of horse's armour
  • politer — showing good manners toward others, as in behavior, speech, etc.; courteous; civil: a polite reply.
  • poulter — a member of staff within e.g. a monastery or royal household, responsible for the supply of poultry
  • prattle — to talk in a foolish or simple-minded way; chatter; babble.
  • prelate — an ecclesiastic of a high order, as an archbishop, bishop, etc.; a church dignitary.
  • prelect — to lecture or discourse publicly.
  • prestel — a videotex system in which information could be received via a telephone line and viewed on an adapted television
  • pretell — to predict
  • pretzel — a crisp, dry biscuit, usually in the form of a knot or stick, salted on the outside.
  • proglet — /prog'let/ [UK] A short extempore program written to meet an immediate, transient need. Often written in BASIC, rarely more than a dozen lines long and containing no subroutines. The largest amount of code that can be written off the top of one's head, that does not need any editing, and that runs correctly the first time (this amount varies significantly according to one's skill and the language one is using). Compare toy program, noddy, one-liner wars.
  • prolate — elongated along the polar diameter, as a spheroid generated by the revolution of an ellipse about its longer axis (opposed to oblate).
  • protyle — a hypothetical primitive substance from which the chemical elements were supposed to have been formed
  • psalter — the Biblical book of Psalms.
  • pteryla — one of the feathered areas on the skin of a bird.
  • pulture — the right of foresters to claim food, drink, and lodging from the inhabitants of a forest for their own maintenance; provisions claimed in this way
  • replant — to plant again.
  • replate — to put new plating on
  • replete — abundantly supplied or provided; filled (usually followed by with): a speech replete with sentimentality.
  • reptile — any cold-blooded vertebrate of the class Reptilia, comprising the turtles, snakes, lizards, crocodilians, amphisbaenians, tuatara, and various extinct members including the dinosaurs.
  • resplit — to split again
  • ripplet — a small ripple.
  • spelter — zinc, especially in the form of ingots.
  • spurtle — a stick used to stir porridge.
  • stapler — a person who staples wool.
  • telpher — Also, teleferic. a traveling unit, car, or carrier suspended from cables in a telpherage, an aerial transportation system.
  • templar — a member of a religious military order founded by Crusaders in Jerusalem about 1118, and suppressed in 1312.
  • tippler — a person who works at a tipple, especially at a mine.
  • trample — to tread or step heavily and noisily; stamp.
  • tripled — threefold; consisting of three parts: a triple knot.
  • triplet — one of three children or offspring born at the same birth.

On this page, we collect all 7-letter words with L-E-T-R-P. It’s easy to find right word with a certain length. It is the easiest way to find 7-letter word that contains in L-E-T-R-P to use in Scrabble or Crossword puzzles

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