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9-letter words containing p, e, t, i

  • pretorius — Andries Wilhelmus Jacobus [ahn-drees vil-hel-moo s yah-kaw-boo s] /ˈɑn dris vɪlˈhɛl mʊs yɑˈkɔ bʊs/ (Show IPA), 1799–1853, and his son Marthinus Wessels [mahr-tee-noo s ves-uh ls] /mɑrˈti nʊs ˈvɛs əls/ (Show IPA) 1819–1901, Boer soldiers and statesmen in South Africa.
  • prettiest — pleasing or attractive to the eye, as by delicacy or gracefulness: a pretty face.
  • prettyish — quite pretty
  • prettyism — an affectedly pretty style
  • pretypify — to foreshadow or prefigure the type of: The father's personality pretypified his son's.
  • price cut — discount, lowering of costs
  • price tag — a label or tag that shows the price of the item to which it is attached.
  • price-cut — to reduce the price of, especially to gain a competitive advantage.
  • price-tag — a label or tag that shows the price of the item to which it is attached.
  • priestess — a woman who officiates in sacred rites.
  • priestley — J(ohn) B(oynton) [boin-tuh n,, -tn] /ˈbɔɪn tən,, -tn/ (Show IPA), 1894–1984, English novelist.
  • primitiae — the first fruits of the harvest
  • primitive — being the first or earliest of the kind or in existence, especially in an early age of the world: primitive forms of life.
  • princeton — a borough in central New Jersey: battle 1777.
  • printable — capable of being printed.
  • printhead — the printing element, as a daisy wheel or thimble, on a computer printer.
  • printless — making, retaining, or showing no print or impression.
  • pritchett — Sir V(ictor) S(awdon) [sawd-n] /ˈsɔd n/ (Show IPA), 1900–97, English literary critic, journalist, novelist, and short-story writer.
  • privateer — an armed ship that is privately owned and manned, commissioned by a government to fight or harass enemy ships.
  • privately — belonging to some particular person: private property.
  • privatise — to transfer from public or government control or ownership to private enterprise: a campaign promise to privatize some of the public lands.
  • privative — causing, or tending to cause, deprivation.
  • privatize — to transfer from public or government control or ownership to private enterprise: a campaign promise to privatize some of the public lands.
  • proactive — serving to prepare for, intervene in, or control an expected occurrence or situation, especially a negative or difficult one; anticipatory: proactive measures against crime.
  • probative — serving or designed for testing or trial.
  • procerity — tallness
  • procident — relating to a prolapse
  • profiteer — a person who seeks or exacts exorbitant profits, especially through the sale of scarce or rationed goods.
  • profiters — Often, profits. pecuniary gain resulting from the employment of capital in any transaction. Compare gross profit, net profit. the ratio of such pecuniary gain to the amount of capital invested. returns, proceeds, or revenue, as from property or investments.
  • progestin — any substance having progesteronelike activity.
  • prolative — functioning to complete the predicate
  • proleptic — Rhetoric. the anticipation of possible objections in order to answer them in advance.
  • prometric — in favour of the metric system
  • prominent — standing out so as to be seen easily; conspicuous; particularly noticeable: Her eyes are her most prominent feature.
  • promotive — tending to promote.
  • prophetic — of or relating to a prophet: prophetic inspiration.
  • propriety — conformity to established standards of good or proper behavior or manners.
  • propylite — a hydrothermally altered andesite or allied rock containing secondary minerals, as calcite, chlorite, serpentine, or epidote.
  • protamine — any of a group of arginine-rich, strongly basic proteins that are not coagulated by heat, occurring primarily in the sperm of fish.
  • proteinic — Biochemistry. any of numerous, highly varied organic molecules constituting a large portion of the mass of every life form and necessary in the diet of all animals and other nonphotosynthesizing organisms, composed of 20 or more amino acids linked in a genetically controlled linear sequence into one or more long polypeptide chains, the final shape and other properties of each protein being determined by the side chains of the amino acids and their chemical attachments: proteins include such specialized forms as collagen for supportive tissue, hemoglobin for transport, antibodies for immune defense, and enzymes for metabolism.
  • proteomic — relating to a proteome
  • prothesis — the addition of a sound or syllable at the beginning of a word, as in Spanish escala “ladder” from Latin scala.
  • prothetic — the addition of a sound or syllable at the beginning of a word, as in Spanish escala “ladder” from Latin scala.
  • protogine — a gneissose granite with sericite, found in the Alps
  • protoxide — the one of a series of oxides having the smallest proportion of oxygen.
  • proustite — a mineral, silver arsenic sulfide, Ag 3 AsS 3 , occurring in scarlet crystals and masses: a minor ore of silver; ruby silver.
  • provident — having or showing foresight; providing carefully for the future.
  • proximate — next; nearest; immediately before or after in order, place, occurrence, etc.
  • prozymite — a person using leavened bread for the Eucharist
  • prussiate — a ferricyanide or ferrocyanide.
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