7-letter words containing l, i, t, e
- inertly — having no inherent power of action, motion, or resistance (opposed to active): inert matter.
- inflate — deflate
- inflect — to modulate (the voice).
- instyle — (obsolete, transitive) To style.
- intitle — entitle.
- inutile — of no use or service.
- irately — angry; enraged: an irate customer.
- isleted — having islets
- isolate — to set or place apart; detach or separate so as to be alone.
- itelmen — a member of a small group of Paleo-Asiatic people inhabiting the Kamchatka peninsula in eastern Siberia.
- jetfoil — a passenger-carrying, jet-propelled hydrofoil, often having a control and stabilization system like that of an aircraft.
- jetlike — Resembling jet (the precious stone).
- jinglet — the clapper of a sleigh-bell
- jolivet — André [ahn-drey] /ɑ̃ˈdreɪ/ (Show IPA), 1905–74, French composer.
- jolliet — Louis [loo-ee;; French lwee] /ˈlu i;; French lwi/ (Show IPA), 1645–1700, French-Canadian explorer, born in Quebec.
- keitele — Lake, a lake in S Finland. About 175 sq. mi. (455 sq. km).
- keitloa — a variety of the black rhinoceros having the posterior horn equal to or longer than the anterior horn.
- kidlets — Plural form of kidlet.
- killeth — Archaic third-person singular form of kill.
- kilvert — Francis. 1840–79, British clergyman and diarist. His diary (published 1938–40) gives a vivid account of life in the Welsh Marches in the 1870s
- kinglet — a king ruling over a small country or territory.
- kirtles — Plural form of kirtle.
- kisetla — a pidgin language based on Swahili, formerly used for communication between Europeans and Africans.
- kittler — Comparative form of kittle.
- kittles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of kittle.
- klister — a sticky wax for use on skis, as for slopes where the snow is excessively wet.
- knittle — (UK, dialect) A string that draws together a purse or bag.
- laaitie — (South Africa, slang) A youth; a young person, especially male.
- labiate — having parts that are shaped or arranged like lips; lipped.
- laciest — Superlative form of lacy.
- lafitte — Jean [zhahn] /ʒɑ̃/ (Show IPA), c1780–c1825, French privateer in the Americas.
- lateish — (colloquial) Quite late.
- lathier — lathlike; long and thin.
- latices — a plural of latex.
- latimer — Hugh, c1470–1555, English Protestant Reformation bishop, reformer, and martyr.
- latrine — a toilet or something used as a toilet, as a trench in the earth in a camp, or bivouac area.
- lattice — a structure of crossed wooden or metal strips usually arranged to form a diagonal pattern of open spaces between the strips.
- laytime — the period of time allowed by a shipowner to a carrier to carry out cargo loading or discharging operations
- laziest — averse or disinclined to work, activity, or exertion; indolent.
- leavitt — Henrietta, 1868–1921, U.S. astronomer.
- lectins — Plural form of lectin.
- lection — a version of a passage in a particular copy or edition of a text; a variant reading.
- lefties — Plural form of lefty.
- leftish — somewhat left-wing
- leftism — a member of the political Left or a person sympathetic to its views.
- leftist — a member of the political Left or a person sympathetic to its views.
- leg hit — a hit made into leg.
- legists — Plural form of legist.
- legitim — the part of an estate that children or other close relatives can claim against the decedent's testament.
- leister — a spearlike implement having three or more prongs, for use in spearing fish.