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9-letter words containing o, s, e, t, i

  • outfields — Plural form of outfield.
  • outliners — Plural form of outliner.
  • outraised — Simple past tense and past participle of outraise.
  • outriders — Plural form of outrider.
  • outsailed — Simple past tense and past participle of outsail.
  • outshined — to surpass in shining; shine more brightly than.
  • outshines — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outshine.
  • outsiders — Plural form of outsider.
  • outstride — to surpass in striding
  • outstrike — (transitive) To strike faster than.
  • outstrive — to strive harder than
  • outweighs — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outweigh.
  • overshirt — a pullover sport shirt, worn outside the waistband of a skirt or pair of slacks.
  • oversight — an omission or error due to carelessness: My bank statement is full of oversights.
  • overskirt — an outer skirt.
  • overstain — to stain too much
  • overstink — to stink more than (something else)
  • ovotestis — the hermaphroditic reproductive organ of some gastropods, containing both an ovary and a testis.
  • oystering — any of several edible, marine, bivalve mollusks of the family Ostreidae, having an irregularly shaped shell, occurring on the bottom or adhering to rocks or other objects in shallow water.
  • pantihose — (used with a plural verb) a one-piece, skintight garment worn by women, combining panties and stockings.
  • patronise — to give (a store, restaurant, hotel, etc.) one's regular patronage; trade with.
  • pectinose — arabinose.
  • penistone — a coarse woollen cloth formerly used to make clothes
  • pentoside — a glycoside that, upon hydrolysis, yields a pentose
  • periaktos — an ancient device used for changing theatre scenery, usually consisting of a revolving triangular prism with different scenes painted on each face; the device was heavily used in the Renaissance
  • peristome — Botany. the one or two circles of small, pointed, toothlike appendages around the orifice of a capsule or urn of mosses, appearing when the lid is removed.
  • peronista — Peronist.
  • perotinus — ("Magnus Magister") fl. late 12th to early 13th century, French composer.
  • pertusion — the process or act of making a hole with a stabbing or penetrating implement
  • petronius — Gaius (ˈɡaɪəs), known as Petronius Arbiter. died 66 ad, Roman satirist, supposed author of the Satyricon, a picaresque account of the licentiousness of contemporary society
  • petrosian — Tigran (tiɡˈran). 1929–84, Soviet chess player; world champion (1963–69)
  • pettitoes — pig's trotters, esp when used as food
  • phonetics — (in Chinese writing) a written element that represents a sound and is used in combination with a radical to form a character.
  • phonetism — the science of speech sounds and of writing phonetically
  • phonetist — a person who uses or advocates phonetic spelling.
  • phosphite — (loosely) a salt of phosphorous acid.
  • pilotless — lacking a pilot or needing no pilot: pilotless aircraft.
  • pipestone — a reddish argillaceous stone used by North American Indians for making tobacco pipes.
  • pistoleer — a person, especially a soldier, who uses or is armed with a pistol.
  • pistolero — a member of an armed band of roving mounted bandits.
  • pistolier — a person, especially a soldier, who uses or is armed with a pistol.
  • pleoptics — the practice of treating the vision defect amblyopia.
  • poeticism — a poetic expression that has become hackneyed, forced, or artificial.
  • point-set — (of spaces) cast in widths that conform to standard point measure.
  • pointless — without a point: a pointless pen.
  • pointwise — occurring at each point of a given set: pointwise convergence.
  • politesse — formal politeness; courtesy.
  • pontlevis — a drawbridge.
  • pooterish — characteristic of or resembling the fictional character Pooter, esp in being bourgeois, genteel, or self-important
  • popliteus — a thin, flat, triangular muscle in back of the knee, the action of which assists in bending the knee and in rotating the leg toward the body.
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