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7-letter words containing o, t, e

  • boxties — Irish potato cakes
  • brenton — Howard. born 1942, British dramatist, author of such controversial plays as The Churchill Play (1974), The Romans in Britain (1980), (with David Hare) Pravda (1985), and several topical satires with Tariq Ali
  • brocket — any small deer of the genus Mazama, of tropical America, having small unbranched antlers
  • brokest — a simple past tense of break.
  • bromate — any salt or ester of bromic acid, containing the monovalent group -BrO3 or ion BrO3–
  • brothel — A brothel is a building where men can go to pay to have sex with prostitutes.
  • brother — Your brother is a boy or a man who has the same parents as you.
  • brouter — A device which bridges some packets (i.e. forwards based on data link layer information) and routes other packets (i.e. forwards based on network layer information). The bridge/route decision is based on configuration information.
  • by rote — by repetition; by heart (often in the phrase learn by rote)
  • bycoket — a type of high-crowned hat
  • c-store — convenience store.
  • cacolet — a seat or bed fitted to a mule for carrying the sick or wounded
  • caetano — Marcello (marˈselu). 1906–80, prime minister of Portugal from 1968 until he was replaced by an army coup in 1974
  • calotte — a skullcap worn by Roman Catholic clergy
  • camelot — (in Arthurian legend) the English town where King Arthur's palace and court were situated
  • capotes — Plural form of capote.
  • cathode — A cathode is the negative electrode in a cell such as a battery. Compare anode.
  • cathole — one of a pair of holes in the after part of a ship through which hawsers are passed for steadying the ship or heaving astern
  • catouse — New England. a noisy disturbance; commotion.
  • cattelo — A cross between domestic cattle and buffalo.
  • cavetto — a concave moulding, shaped to a quarter circle in cross section
  • celotex — a type of thermal insulation board
  • cenotes — Plural form of cenote.
  • centavo — a monetary unit of Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Cape Verde, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, the Dominican Republic, Guatemala, Guinea-Bissau, Honduras, Mexico, Mozambique, Nicaragua, and the Philippines. It is worth one hundredth of their respective standard units
  • centimo — monetary unit of Costa Rica, Paraguay, Peru, and Venezuela
  • centro- — denoting a centre
  • cerato- — denoting horn or a hornlike part
  • cerotic — designating or of either of two fatty acids, C26H52O2 or C27H54O2, esters of which are found in beeswax and other waxes and oils
  • cestode — any parasitic flatworm of the class Cestoda, which includes the tapeworms
  • cestoid — (esp of tapeworms and similar animals) ribbon-like in form
  • chaeto- — hair or bristles
  • chayote — a tropical American cucurbitaceous climbing plant, Sechium edule, that has edible pear-shaped fruit enclosing a single enormous seed
  • cheroot — A cheroot is a cigar with both ends cut flat.
  • cheviot — a large British breed of sheep reared for its wool
  • cholate — a cholic acid salt
  • cholent — a meal usually consisting of a stew of meat, potatoes, and pulses prepared before the Sabbath on Friday and left to cook until eaten for Sabbath lunch
  • chorten — a Buddhist shrine
  • chortle — To chortle means to laugh in a way that shows you are very pleased.
  • choyote — chayote.
  • citoles — Plural form of citole.
  • clootie — (usually initial capital letter) cloot (def 2).
  • cloquet — a town in NE Minnesota.
  • closest — to put (something) in a position to obstruct an entrance, opening, etc.; shut.
  • closets — Plural form of closet.
  • clothed — If you are clothed in a certain way, you are dressed in that way.
  • clothes — Clothes are the things that people wear, such as shirts, coats, trousers, and dresses.
  • clotted — a mass or lump.
  • clotter — to clot
  • cloture — closure in the US Senate
  • clouted — a blow, especially with the hand; cuff: The bully gave him a painful clout on the head.
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