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

  • shilpit — (of a person) sickly; puny; feeble.
  • sialkot — a city in NE Pakistan: military station.
  • sightly — pleasing to the sight; attractive; comely.
  • silt up — If a river or lake silts up or something silts it up, it becomes blocked with silt.
  • silting — earthy matter, fine sand, or the like carried by moving or running water and deposited as a sediment.
  • simpl-t — The base language for a family of languages and compilers.
  • singlet — a sleeveless athletic jersey, especially a loose-fitting top worn by runners, joggers, etc.
  • singult — a sob
  • sitella — any of various small generally black-and-white birds of the genus Neositta, having a straight sharp beak and strong claws used to run up trees in search of insects: family Sittidae (nuthatches)
  • sithole — Ndabaningi (əndabaˈnɪŋɡɪ). 1920–2000, Zimbabwean clergyman and politician; leader of the Zimbabwe African National Union (1963–74). He was one of the negotiators of the internal settlement (1978) to pave the way for Black majority rule in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe)
  • sitwellDame Edith, 1887–1964, English poet and critic.
  • skelpit — slapped
  • skillet — a frying pan.
  • skittleskittles, (used with a singular verb) ninepins in which a wooden ball or disk is used to knock down the pins.
  • slainte — cheers!
  • slating — a fine-grained rock formed by the metamorphosis of clay, shale, etc., that tends to split along parallel cleavage planes, usually at an angle to the planes of stratification.
  • slatkin — Leonard. born 1944, US conductor; musical director of the St Louis Symphony Orchestra (1979–96) and of the National Symphony Orchestra (1996–2008)
  • slavist — a specialist in the study of Slavic languages, cultures, etc.
  • sleekit — sleeky.
  • sleight — skill; dexterity.
  • slights — small in amount, degree, etc.: a slight increase; a slight odor.
  • slinter — a dodge, trick, or stratagem
  • sliotar — the ball used in hurling
  • slipout — an instance of slipping out
  • slither — to slide down or along a surface, especially unsteadily, from side to side, or with some friction or noise: The box slithered down the chute.
  • smittle — (of a disease) infectious
  • sniglet — any word coined for something that has no specific name.
  • solatia — something given in compensation for inconvenience, loss, injury, or the like; recompense.
  • solicit — to seek for (something) by entreaty, earnest or respectful request, formal application, etc.: He solicited aid from the minister.
  • soliton — an isolated particle-like wave that is a solution of certain equations for propagation, occurring when two solitary waves do not change their form after collision and subsequently travelling for considerable distances
  • soloist — a person who performs a solo.
  • somital — any of the longitudinal series of segments or parts into which the body of certain animals is divided; a metamere.
  • spatial — of or relating to space.
  • spilite — a type of igneous rock
  • spitbol — SPeedy ImplemenTation of snoBOL. "Macro SPITBOL - A SNOBOL4 Compiler", R.B.K. Dewar et al, Soft Prac & Exp 7:95-113, 1971. Current versions: SPITBOL-68000, Sparc SPITBOL from Catspaw Inc, (719)539-3884.
  • spittle — saliva; spit.
  • split-c — Parallel extension of C for distributed memory multiprocessors. Aims to provide efficient low-level access to the underlying machine.
  • spotlit — a strong, focused light thrown upon a particular spot, as on a small area of a stage or in a television studio, for making some object, person, or group especially conspicuous.
  • stabile — fixed in position; stable.
  • stadial — stade.
  • staidly — of settled or sedate character; not flighty or capricious.
  • staling — not fresh; vapid or flat, as beverages; dry or hardened, as bread.
  • stalino — a former name of Donetsk.
  • staniel — a kestrel
  • starlit — lighted by the stars: a starlit night.
  • steelie — steelhead.
  • stellio — a lizard
  • stencil — a device for applying a pattern, design, words, etc., to a surface, consisting of a thin sheet of cardboard, metal, or other material from which figures or letters have been cut out, a coloring substance, ink, etc., being rubbed, brushed, or pressed over the sheet, passing through the perforations and onto the surface.
  • sterile — free from living germs or microorganisms; aseptic: sterile surgical instruments.
  • stibial — of or resembling antimony.
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