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7-letter words containing m, e, r, t

  • erratum — An error in printing or writing.
  • euratom — short for European Atomic Energy Community; an authority established by the European Economic Community (now the European Union) to develop peaceful uses of nuclear energy
  • extream — Archaic spelling of extreme.
  • extrema — Plural form of extremum.
  • extreme — Reaching a high or the highest degree; very great.
  • fermata — the sustaining of a note, chord, or rest for a duration longer than the indicated time value, with the length of the extension at the performer's discretion.
  • fermate — the sustaining of a note, chord, or rest for a duration longer than the indicated time value, with the length of the extension at the performer's discretion.
  • ferment — Also called organized ferment. any of a group of living organisms, as yeasts, molds, and certain bacteria, that cause fermentation.
  • firmest — Superlative form of firm.
  • formate — a salt or ester of formic acid.
  • forment — Misspelling of foment.
  • fremontJohn Charles, 1813–90, U.S. general and explorer: first Republican presidential candidate, 1856.
  • fretman — A guitar player, especially one who plays acoustic guitar.
  • fretmen — Plural form of fretman.
  • garment — any article of clothing: dresses, suits, and other garments.
  • gourmet — a connoisseur of fine food and drink; epicure.
  • grommet — Machinery. any of various rings or eyelets of metal or the like. an insulated washer of rubber or plastic, inserted in a hole in a metal part to prevent grounding of a wire passing through the hole.
  • grummet — grommet.
  • gumtree — any tree that exudes gum, as a eucalyptus, the sour gum, or the sweet gum.
  • hamster — any of several short-tailed, stout-bodied, burrowing rodents, as Cricetus cricetus, of Europe and Asia, having large cheek pouches.
  • harmest — (archaic) Archaic second-person singular form of harm.
  • hermiteCharles [sharl] /ʃarl/ (Show IPA), 1822–1901, French mathematician.
  • hermits — Plural form of hermit.
  • imbrute — to reduce to a bestial state
  • imprest — impressment.
  • imputer — to attribute or ascribe: The children imputed magical powers to the old woman.
  • interim — an intervening time; interval; meantime: School doesn't start till September, but he's taking a Spanish class in the interim.
  • lambert — Constant [kon-stuh nt] /ˈkɒn stənt/ (Show IPA), 1905–51, English composer and conductor.
  • lameter — (Scots) a cripple.
  • lamster — a fugitive from the law.
  • latimerHugh, c1470–1555, English Protestant Reformation bishop, reformer, and martyr.
  • leitrim — a county of N Republic of Ireland in Connacht province, on Donegal Bay: agricultural. County town: Carrick-on-Shannon. Pop: 25 799 (2002). Area: 1525 sq km (589 sq miles)
  • limiter — a person or thing that limits.
  • maestri — Plural form of maestro.
  • maestro — an eminent composer, teacher, or conductor of music: Toscanini and other great maestros.
  • magrets — Plural form of magret.
  • maistre — Josephe de (ʒozɛf də). 1753–1821, French writer and diplomat, noted for his extreme reactionary views, expounded in such works as Les Soirées de St Petersbourg (1821)
  • manrent — (historical) A contract, usually military and between Scottish clans, in which a weaker man or clan pledged to serve, in return for protection, a stronger lord or clan.
  • margate — a city in NE Kent, in SE England: seaside resort.
  • margent — margin.
  • markets — Plural form of market.
  • marlite — an indurated marl.
  • marmite — a metal or earthenware cooking pot with a cover, usually large and often having legs.
  • martele — martellato.
  • martens — Plural form of marten.
  • martext — a preacher who makes many mistakes
  • martlet — British Dialect. a house martin.
  • martnet — an arrangement of lines formerly used for gathering up a leech of a sail.
  • masters — a degree awarded by a graduate school or department, usually to a person who has completed at least one year of graduate study.
  • mastery — command or grasp, as of a subject: a mastery of Italian.
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