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

  • mytilus — Any of the genus Mytilus of marine bivalve shells, including the common mussel.
  • nailset — a punch for driving the head of a nail below or flush with the surrounding surface
  • nastily — physically filthy; disgustingly unclean: a nasty pigsty of a room.
  • nostril — either of the two external openings of the nose.
  • oblasti — (in Russia and the Soviet Union) an administrative division corresponding to an autonomous province.
  • oculist — ophthalmologist.
  • oiliest — Superlative form of oily.
  • oligist — (mineralogy) Hematite or specular iron ore.
  • ologist — an expert or student in an academic branch of learning
  • onliest — being the single one or the relatively few of the kind: This is the only pencil I can find.
  • oolites — Plural form of oolite.
  • oralist — an advocate of oralism.
  • ostiole — Biology. a small opening or pore, especially in the fruiting body of a fungus.
  • outsail — to outdo in sailing; sail farther, more skillfully, or faster than.
  • paulist — a member of the “Missionary Society of St. Paul the Apostle,” a community of priests founded in New York in 1858.
  • paylist — a list of people to be paid
  • pilates — a system of physical conditioning involving low-impact exercises and stretches designed to strengthen muscles of the torso and often performed with specialized equipment.
  • pilatus — a mountain in central Switzerland, near Lucerne: a peak of the Alps; cable railway. 6998 feet (2130 meters).
  • pilotis — a column of iron, steel, or reinforced concrete supporting a building above an open ground level.
  • pistole — a former gold coin of Spain, equal to two escudos.
  • plastic — Often, plastics. any of a group of synthetic or natural organic materials that may be shaped when soft and then hardened, including many types of resins, resinoids, polymers, cellulose derivatives, casein materials, and proteins: used in place of other materials, as glass, wood, and metals, in construction and decoration, for making many articles, as coatings, and, drawn into filaments, for weaving. They are often known by trademark names, as Bakelite, Vinylite, or Lucite.
  • plastid — a small, double-membraned organelle of plant cells and certain protists, occurring in several varieties, as the chloroplast, and containing ribosomes, prokaryotic DNA, and, often, pigment.
  • plenist — a person who adheres to the philosophical theory of plenism
  • ploesti — a city in S Romania: center of a rich oil-producing region.
  • plumist — a person who makes ornamental plumes
  • pollist — a person who advocates the use of polls
  • poloist — a person who plays or is devoted to polo
  • realist — a person who tends to view or represent things as they really are.
  • resplit — to split again
  • saintlo — a department in NW France. 2476 sq. mi. (6413 sq. km). Capital: Saint-Lô.
  • saintly — pertaining to, like, or befitting a saint: saintly lives.
  • salient — prominent or conspicuous: salient traits.
  • saligot — the water chestnut, Trapa natans
  • salt ii — either of two preliminary five-year agreements between the U.S. and the Soviet Union for the control of certain nuclear weapons, the first concluded in 1972 (SALT I) and the second drafted in 1979 (SALT II) but not ratified.
  • saltier — tasting of or containing salt; saline.
  • saltily — in a salty manner
  • saltine — a crisp, salted cracker.
  • salting — a crystalline compound, sodium chloride, NaCl, occurring as a mineral, a constituent of seawater, etc., and used for seasoning food, as a preservative, etc.
  • saltire — an ordinary in the form of a cross with arms running diagonally from the dexter chief to the sinister base and from the sinister chief to the dexter base; St. Andrew's cross.
  • saltish — somewhat salty.
  • santali — the Munda language spoken by the Santal.
  • satilla — a river in SE Georgia, flowing E to the Atlantic Ocean. 220 miles (354 km) long.
  • sciolto — (of a piece of music) to be played freely and easily
  • sealift — a system for transporting persons or cargo by ship, especially in an emergency.
  • sectile — capable of being cut smoothly with a knife.
  • selfist — a selfish person
  • setline — any of various types of fishing line that consist of a long line suspended across a stream, between buoys, etc, and having shorter hooked and baited lines attached
  • sextile — Astronomy. noting or pertaining to the aspect or position of two heavenly bodies when 60° distant from each other.
  • sheitel — a wig worn by certain Orthodox Jewish married women in keeping with an old rabbinical precept that forbids a woman to leave her hair uncovered in the sight of a man other than her husband.
  • sheltie — Shetland pony.
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