7-letter words containing m, e, r, t
- moister — moderately or slightly wet; damp.
- moither — (Yorkshire, dialect) to bother or harass.
- moniter — (spelling) It's spelled "monitor".
- monster — a legendary animal combining features of animal and human form or having the forms of various animals in combination, as a centaur, griffin, or sphinx.
- monstre — Obsolete form of monster.
- montera — A traditional Iberian hat associated with bullfighters.
- montero — a Spanish hunter's cap, round in shape and having an earflap.
- monture — a mounting or a means for supporting or fixing something in place
- mordent — a melodic embellishment consisting of a rapid alternation of a principal tone with the tone a half or a whole step below it, called single or short when the auxiliary tone occurs once and double or long when this occurs twice or more.
- morpeth — a town in NE England, the administrative centre of Northumberland. Pop: 13 555 (2001)
- mortage — Misspelling of mortgage.
- mortice — to secure with a mortise and tenon.
- mortise — a notch, hole, groove, or slot made in a piece of wood or the like to receive a tenon of the same dimensions.
- mothers — Plural form of mother.
- mothery — Consisting of, containing, or resembling mother (in vinegar).
- mothier — Comparative form of mothy.
- motored — pertaining to or operated by a motor.
- mottler — A brush used to create a mottled surface by removing parts of the glaze from an object.
- mounter — One who mounts.
- mouther — A person who mouths.
- mt rev. — Most Reverend
- multure — a toll or fee given to the proprietor of a mill for the grinding of grain, usually consisting of a fixed proportion of the grain brought or of the flour made.
- munster — a city in NW Germany: treaty of Westphalia 1648.
- muntrie — a SE Australian myrtaceous shrub, Kunzea pomifera, that has green-red edible berries
- müntzer — Thomas. c. 1490–1525, German radical religious and political reformer; executed for organizing the Peasants' War (1524–25)
- muriate — (not in scientific use) any chloride, especially potassium chloride, KCl, used as a fertilizer.
- murjite — a member of a sect asserting that a man cannot be judged by his present or past actions and that such judgment must be left to God.
- murther — Obsolete form of murder.
- musters — Plural form of muster.
- mustier — Comparative form of musty.
- mutters — Plural form of mutter.
- myrtles — Plural form of myrtle.
- mystery — anything that is kept secret or remains unexplained or unknown: the mysteries of nature.
- octamer — an eight-molecule complex.
- oestrum — Alternative spelling of estrum.
- omitter — to leave out; fail to include or mention: to omit a name from a list.
- patmore — Coventry (Kersey Dighton) [kov-uh n-tree kur-zee dahyt-n,, duhv-uh n‐] /ˈkɒv ən tri ˈkɜr zi ˈdaɪt n,, ˈdʌv ən‐/ (Show IPA), 1823–96, English poet and essayist.
- permute — to alter; change.
- pomfret — any of several scombroid fishes of the family Bramidae, found in the North Atlantic and Pacific.
- preempt — to occupy (land) in order to establish a prior right to buy.
- premeet — happening before a meet
- preterm — occurring earlier in pregnancy than expected; premature: preterm labor.
- pretrim — to trim in advance
- primate — Ecclesiastical. an archbishop or bishop ranking first among the bishops of a province or country.
- primest — of the first importance; demanding the fullest consideration: a prime requisite.
- pro tem — temporarily; for the time being.
- promote — to help or encourage to exist or flourish; further: to promote world peace.
- pteroma — pteron.
- ragment — a statute, roll, or list
- ragtime — a novel (1975) by E. L. Doctorow.