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8-letter words containing o, r, a, t, e

  • ectosarc — the ectoplasm of a protozoan (opposed to endosarc).
  • educator — a person or thing that educates, especially a teacher, principal, or other person involved in planning or directing education.
  • elevator — A platform or compartment housed in a shaft for raising and lowering people or things to different floors or levels.
  • empatron — to treat in the manner of a patron
  • emulator — A person or thing that emulates.
  • ephorate — The office of an ephor; ephors collectively.
  • epilator — An electrical device used for hair removal by mechanically grasping multiple hairs simultaneously and pulling them out.
  • equators — Plural form of equator.
  • ergatoid — a wingless, worker-like ant with sexual capability
  • erotical — (obsolete) Erotic.
  • escargot — A snail, especially as an item on a menu.
  • estragon — Tarragon.
  • ethogram — a description of an animal's behaviour
  • eurocrat — European Union official
  • euromart — European Economic Community
  • eurostar — a high speed train that connects London and Kent in the UK with Paris and Lille in France and Brussels in Belgium by crossing the English Channel through the Channel Tunnel
  • eurostat — an organization within the European Union that collects and collates statistical information relating to member states
  • evocator — Someone who evokes.
  • expiator — One who makes expiation or atonement.
  • extrados — The upper or outer curve of an arch.
  • factored — Simple past tense and past participle of factor.
  • favorite — a person or thing regarded with special favor or preference: That song is an old favorite of mine.
  • fear not — You say 'fear not' or 'never fear' to someone when you are telling them not to worry or be frightened.
  • fellator — to perform fellatio on.
  • fireboat — a powered vessel equipped to fight fires on boats, docks, shores, etc.
  • fleawort — a European plantain, Plantago psyllium, having seeds that are used in medicine.
  • floaters — a person or thing that floats.
  • flowrate — The flowrate is the speed at which fluid in a pipe moves, or the speed at which it moves from a reservoir into a wellbore.
  • footcare — of or relating to the care of one's feet: a footcare specialist.
  • footgear — covering for the feet, as shoes, boots, etc.
  • footrace — a race run by contestants on foot.
  • footwear — articles to be worn on the feet, as shoes, slippers, or boots.
  • forecast — to predict (a future condition or occurrence); calculate in advance: to forecast a heavy snowfall; to forecast lower interest rates.
  • foredate — to antedate.
  • foremast — the mast nearest the bow in all vessels having two or more masts.
  • forepart — the first, front, or early part.
  • forepast — bygone
  • forestal — a large tract of land covered with trees and underbrush; woodland.
  • forestay — a stay leading aft and upward from the stem or knightheads of a vessel to the head of the fore lower mast; the lowermost stay of a foremast.
  • foretake — (transitive) To take, receive, or adopt beforehand; assume.
  • formated — Misspelling of formatted.
  • formates — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of formate.
  • forwaste — to waste completely
  • freakout — A frightening or disorientating experience, especially one that results from the use of a hallucinogenic drug.
  • frontage — the front of a building or lot.
  • frottage — a technique in the visual arts of obtaining textural effects or images by rubbing lead, chalk, charcoal, etc., over paper laid on a granular or relieflike surface. Compare rubbing (def 2).
  • garotted — to execute by the garrote.
  • garotter — garrote.
  • garroted — a method of capital punishment of Spanish origin in which an iron collar is tightened around a condemned person's neck until death occurs by strangulation or by injury to the spinal column at the base of the brain.
  • garroter — a method of capital punishment of Spanish origin in which an iron collar is tightened around a condemned person's neck until death occurs by strangulation or by injury to the spinal column at the base of the brain.
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