10-letter words containing o, t, f
- self-worth — the sense of one's own value or worth as a person; self-esteem; self-respect.
- send forth — to be a source of; cause to appear; give out or forth; produce, emit, utter, etc.
- setiferous — having setae or bristles.
- settle for — to appoint, fix, or resolve definitely and conclusively; agree upon (as time, price, or conditions).
- sex factor — a sex-determining chromosome or gene.
- shift down — When you shift down, you move the gear lever in the vehicle you are driving in order to use a lower gear.
- shift lock — a typewriter or computer key that locks the shift key in depressed position.
- shirtfront — front of a shirt
- shop front — A shop front is the outside part of a shop which faces the street, including the door and windows.
- shopfitter — a worker who makes and installs fittings for commercial premises
- shoplifter — a person who steals goods from the shelves or displays of a retail store while posing as a customer.
- shorefront — land along a shore.
- short fuse — a quick temper: A person with a short fuse has to be handled diplomatically.
- short-form — noting or relating to journalistic content or a genre of journalism characterized by short articles.
- short-life — not designed to last
- six-footer — a person who is roughly six feet tall.
- sixth form — secondary school: final 2 years
- sixty-four — a cardinal number, 60 plus 4.
- snake foot — an elongated foot or short leg, as to a pedestal table, having the form of an ogee tangent to the floor surface.
- soft armor — quilted fabric used as armor.
- soft drink — a beverage that is not alcoholic or intoxicating and is usually carbonated, as root beer or ginger ale.
- soft focus — an image, often created by a special lens, that is recognizable but somewhat blurred or diffused.
- soft fruit — berries
- soft goods — textiles and home fabrics
- soft money — money contributed to a political candidate or party that is not subject to federal regulations.
- soft paste — any of a variety of artificial porcelains, usually incorporating glass or glass ingredients.
- soft power — the ability to achieve one's goals without force, esp by diplomacy, persuasion, etc
- soft scale — any of numerous homopterous insect pests of the family Coccidae, as leafhoppers, aphids, and whiteflies, that are destructive to crops, shade and fruit trees, and various houseplants.
- soft serve — frozen custard
- soft steel — mild steel.
- soft touch — a person who is easily convinced, especially to give or lend money: a soft touch for charities.
- soft wheat — a wheat characterized by soft, starchy kernels that yield a flour used in making pastry, breakfast cereals, etc.
- soft-bound — (of a book) having a thin cardboard, paper, or plastic cover
- soft-pedal — to use the soft pedal.
- soft-shell — Also, soft-shelled. having a soft, flexible, or fragile shell, as a crab that has recently molted.
- softballer — a person who plays or is an enthusiast of softball.
- softheaded — stupid or foolish
- somatoform — characterized by symptoms suggesting a physical disorder but for which there are no demonstrable organic findings or known physiological mechanisms.
- southfield — a city in SE Michigan, W of Detroit.
- spade foot — a square foot, tapering toward its bottom.
- splay-foot — a broad, flat foot, especially one turned outward.
- spoondrift — spindrift.
- sport fish — a type of fish that is prized for the sport it gives the angler in its capture rather than for its value as food.
- sports fan — sb who enjoys watching or playing sport
- stableford — a scoring system in which points are awarded according to the number of strokes taken at each hole, whereby a hole completed in one stroke over par counts as one point, a hole completed in level par counts as two points, etc
- stainproof — resistant to stains
- starflower — any of several plants having starlike flowers, as the star-of-Bethlehem or a plant belonging to the genus Trientalis of the primrose family.
- stefansson — Vilhjalmur [vil-hyoul-mer] /ˈvɪlˌhyaʊl mər/ (Show IPA), 1879–1962, U.S. arctic explorer and author, born in Canada.
- stelliform — star-shaped.
- stilliform — drop-shaped; globular.