7-letter words containing o, t, a
- u-boats — a German submarine.
- upcoast — along a coast in a northward direction
- utamaro — Kitagawa [kee-tah-gah-wah] /ˈki tɑˈgɑ wɑ/ (Show IPA), 1753–1806, Japanese painter, draftsman, and designer of prints.
- utopian — of, relating to, or resembling Utopia, an idealized imaginary island described in Sir Thomas More's Utopia (1516).
- venator — a hunter
- vibrato — a pulsating effect, produced in singing by the rapid reiteration of emphasis on a tone, and on bowed instruments by a rapid change of pitch corresponding to the vocal tremolo.
- violate — to break, infringe, or transgress (a law, rule, agreement, promise, instructions, etc.).
- vitoria — a state in E Brazil. 15,196 sq. mi. (39,360 sq. km). Capital: Vitória.
- voiotia — a department of E central Greece: corresponds to ancient Boeotia and part of ancient Phocis. Pop: 123 913 (2001). Area: 3173 sq km (1225 sq miles)
- volante — a horse carriage of Spanish origin
- volatic — a creature with wings
- voltage — electromotive force or potential difference expressed in volts.
- voltaic — Electricity. noting or pertaining to electricity or electric currents, especially when produced by chemical action, as in a cell; galvanic.
- vorkuta — a city N of the Arctic Circle, in the Komi Republic, in NE European Russia.
- votable — capable of being voted upon; subject to a vote: a votable issue.
- waikato — a river in central North Island, New Zealand, flowing NW to the Tasman Sea: longest river in New Zealand. 264 miles (425 km) long.
- wait on — to remain inactive or in a state of repose, as until something expected happens (often followed by for, till, or until): to wait for the bus to arrive.
- waitron — a person of either sex who waits on tables; waiter or waitress.
- walcott — Derek, born 1930, West Indian poet and playwright: Nobel prize 1992.
- walkout — a strike by workers.
- wantons — Plural form of wanton.
- wapatoo — an arrowhead plant, Sagittaria latifolia.
- warthog — an African wild swine, Phacochoerus aethiopicus, having large tusks and warty protuberances on the face.
- wartorn — Alternative form of war-torn.
- washout — a washing out of earth, gravel, etc., by water, as from an embankment or a roadway by heavy rain or by a flash flood.
- washpot — A pot which holds water for washing.
- watford — a city in Hertfordshire, SE England, N of London.
- wavetop — The top of a wave.
- way-out — advanced in style or technique: way-out jazz.
- waypost — A sign or other marker that indicates the way along a road or trail.
- wharton — Edith, 1862–1937, U.S. novelist.
- what-ho — an expression used as a greeting or to attract attention
- whatnot — a stand with shelves for bric-a-brac, books, etc.
- wheaton — a town in central Maryland.
- wombats — Plural form of wombat.
- wontcha — (eye dialect, informal) Won't you.
- woodrat — A packrat (kind of rodent).
- woolhat — a hat made of wool
- wyandot — an Indian of the former Huron confederacy.
- xantho- — indicating yellow
- yankton — a member of one of two tribes of Dakota Indian people who inhabited the northern Great Plains in the 18th and 19th centuries. Compare Yanktonai.
- zabuton — a large, flat cushion, used in Japan for sitting or kneeling on the floor. See also zafu.
- zacaton — a coarse grass that grows in bunches and is found in Mexico and south-western USA, esp the species Sporobolus and Epicampes
- zapateo — a Cuban dance in three-quarter time emphasizing staccato stamping footwork.
- zapotec — a member of an American Indian people living in the Mexican state of Oaxaca.
- zatopek — Emil [e-mil] /ˈɛ mɪl/ (Show IPA), 1922–2000, Czech long-distance runner.
- zealots — Plural form of zealot.
- zontian — a member of a Zonta Club, an organization for professional women.
- zootaxy — the science of the classification of animals