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7-letter words containing p, y, t

  • isotype — a drawing, diagram, or other symbol that represents a specific quantity of or other fact about the thing depicted: Every isotype of a house on that chart represents a thousand new houses.
  • kapteyn — Jacobus Cornelis [yah-koh-bys kawr-ney-lis] /yɑˈkoʊ büs kɔrˈneɪ lɪs/ (Show IPA), 1851–1922, Dutch astronomer.
  • krypton — an inert, monatomic gaseous element, present in very small amounts in the atmosphere: used in high-power, tungsten-filament light bulbs. Symbol: Kr; atomic weight: 83.80; atomic number: 36.
  • laptray — a tray with a cushioned underside, designed to rest in a person's lap while supporting reading material, a meal eaten while watching television, etc
  • mistype — a number of things or persons sharing a particular characteristic, or set of characteristics, that causes them to be regarded as a group, more or less precisely defined or designated; class; category: a criminal of the most vicious type.
  • neotype — a specimen selected to replace a holotype that has been lost or destroyed.
  • netplay — (video games) Multiplayer gameplay over a network.
  • nymphet — a young nymph.
  • octuply — in an octuple or eightfold manner
  • oophyte — the gametophyte of a moss, fern, or liverwort, resulting from the development of a fertilized egg.
  • opacity — the state or quality of being opaque.
  • outpity — to exceed in pitying
  • outplay — to play better than.
  • outpray — to exceed in praying or overcome by prayer
  • outyelp — to outdo in yelping
  • paneity — the state of being bread, esp Eucharistic bread
  • parenty — a large, brown and yellow monitor lizard, Varanus giganteus, native to arid and semiarid regions of Australia.
  • parroty — like a parrot; chattering
  • partway — at or to a part of the way or distance: Shall I walk you partway? I'm already partway home.
  • partyer — a person who parties, especially regularly or habitually: New Year's Eve always brings out the partyers.
  • patency — the state of being patent.
  • pathway — a path, course, route, or way.
  • paucity — smallness of quantity; scarcity; scantiness: a country with a paucity of resources.
  • pay cut — a decrease in pay or salary
  • pay out — to settle (a debt, obligation, etc.), as by transferring money or goods, or by doing something: Please pay your bill.
  • paydirt — soil, gravel, or ore that can be mined profitably.
  • paylist — a list of people to be paid
  • payment — something that is paid; an amount paid; compensation; recompense.
  • paystub — A paystub is a piece of paper given to an employee when he or she is paid stating how much money has been earned and how much has been taken from that sum for things such as tax.
  • peatary — an area covered with peat; peat bog
  • penalty — a punishment imposed or incurred for a violation of law or rule.
  • pet day — a single fine day during a period of bad weather
  • petrary — a weapon used to propel stones
  • petrify — to convert into stone or a stony substance.
  • peytrel — the part of a horse's harness or the protective part that shields its chest
  • phratry — a grouping of clans or other social units within a tribe.
  • phytane — a hydrocarbon found in some fossilized plant remains
  • phytate — a salt or ester of phytic acid, occurring in plants, especially cereal grains, capable of forming insoluble complexes with calcium, zinc, iron, and other nutrients and interfering with their absorption by the body.
  • phytoid — having the appearance of a plant; like a plant
  • piosity — an excessive or obvious show of piety; sanctimoniousness.
  • pithily — brief, forceful, and meaningful in expression; full of vigor, substance, or meaning; terse; forcible: a pithy observation.
  • pitying — Informal. motivated by a sense of pity or sympathy for others or for oneself: to have pity sex with a virgin; to go on a pity date with a loser.
  • planxty — a lively Celtic melody, chiefly for the harp
  • platypi — a small, aquatic, egg-laying monotreme, Ornithorhynchus anatinus, of Australia and Tasmania, having webbed feet, a tail like that of a beaver, a sensitive bill resembling that of a duck, and, in adult males, venom-injecting spurs on the ankles of the hind limbs, used primarily for fighting with other males during the breeding season.
  • play at — a dramatic composition or piece; drama.
  • play it — to act in a (specified) manner
  • playact — to engage in make-believe.
  • playlet — a short play.
  • polyact — (of a sea creature) having many tentacles or limb-like protrusions
  • polycot — a polycotyledon.
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