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7-letter words containing l, i, t, e

  • tieless — without a tie or necktie
  • tiepolo — Giovanni Battista [joh-vah-nee buh-tee-stuh;; Italian jaw-vahn-nee baht-tee-stah] /dʒoʊˈvɑ ni bəˈti stə;; Italian dʒɔˈvɑn ni bɑtˈti stɑ/ (Show IPA), 1696–1770, and his son, Giovanni Domenico [duh-men-i-koh;; Italian daw-me-nee-kaw] /dəˈmɛn ɪˌkoʊ;; Italian dɔˈmɛ ni kɔ/ (Show IPA) 1727–1804, Italian painters.
  • tiercel — tercel.
  • tigerly — of or like a tiger
  • tillage — the operation, practice, or art of tilling land.
  • tillite — a rock composed of consolidated till.
  • timbale — Also, timbale case. a small shell made of batter, fried usually in a timbale iron.
  • timbrel — a tambourine or similar instrument.
  • tinchel — (in Scotland) a circle of deer hunters who gradually close in on a deer herd
  • tindale — William Tyndale
  • tingley — Katherine Augusta Westcott [wes-kuh t] /ˈwɛs kət/ (Show IPA), 1847–1929, U.S. theosophist leader.
  • tippler — a person who works at a tipple, especially at a mine.
  • toeclip — an attachment on a bicycle pedal into which the toes are inserted to prevent the foot from slipping
  • toenail — a nail of a toe.
  • tolkien — J(ohn) R(onald) R(euel) [roo-uh l] /ˈru əl/ (Show IPA), 1892–1973, English novelist, philologist, and teacher, born in South Africa.
  • toluide — any of a class of chemical compounds having the general formula RCONHC6H4CH3, derived from the toluidines by the substitution of an acid radical for one of the amino H atoms
  • topline — so important as to be named at or near the top of a newspaper item, advertisement, or the like: a topline actress; topline news.
  • torelli — Giuseppe [joo-zep-pe] /dʒuˈzɛp pɛ/ (Show IPA), 1650?–1708, Italian composer and violinist.
  • tortile — twisted; coiled.
  • towline — a line, hawser, or the like, by which anything is or may be towed.
  • trailed — to drag or let drag along the ground or other surface; draw or drag along behind.
  • trailer — a large van or wagon drawn by an automobile, truck, or tractor, used especially in hauling freight by road. Compare full trailer, semitrailer.
  • 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.
  • trellis — a frame or structure of latticework; lattice.
  • trenail — a wooden pin that swells when moist, used for fastening together timbers, as those of ships.
  • triable — liable to be tried judicially
  • tribble — (in paper manufacture) a frame for drying paper
  • triblet — a spindle or mandrel used in making rings, tubes, etc
  • trickle — to flow or fall by drops, or in a small, gentle stream: Tears trickled down her cheeks.
  • triella — three nominated horse races in which the punter bets on selecting the three winners
  • trifled — an article or thing of very little value.
  • trifler — an article or thing of very little value.
  • trilled — to cause to flow in a thin stream.
  • triller — someone who trills
  • trilobe — anything with three lobes, esp a leaf
  • trimbleDavid, born 1944, Northern Ireland politician: Nobel prize 1998.
  • trindle — British Dialect. a wheel, especially of a wheelbarrow.
  • tringle — a narrow, straight molding, as a fillet.
  • triolet — a short poem of fixed form, having a rhyme scheme of ab, aa, abab, and having the first line repeated as the fourth and seventh lines, and the second line repeated as the eighth.
  • tripled — threefold; consisting of three parts: a triple knot.
  • triplet — one of three children or offspring born at the same birth.
  • triplex — threefold; triple.
  • tripple — a horse's gait, similar to an amble
  • tritely — lacking in freshness or effectiveness because of constant use or excessive repetition; hackneyed; stale: the trite phrases in his letter.
  • troolie — an extremely large palm leaf from a C and S American tree (Manicaria saccifera)
  • tublike — resembling a tub in shape
  • tuilyie — to quarrel or argue
  • tunicle — a vestment worn over the alb by subdeacons, as at the celebration of the Mass, and by bishops.
  • twiddle — to turn about or play with lightly or idly, especially with the fingers; twirl.
  • twiglet — a small twig
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