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7-letter words containing r, e, l, a

  • sealery — a place where seals are caught.
  • secular — of or relating to worldly things or to things that are not regarded as religious, spiritual, or sacred; temporal: secular interests.
  • serkali — (in Africa) the government
  • serosal — of or relating to a serosa
  • serpula — a member of a genus of marine annelid or tubeworm belonging to the Serpulid family, characterized by the serpentine calcareous tube it produces and inhabits
  • serumal — the clear, pale-yellow liquid that separates from the clot in the coagulation of blood; blood serum.
  • several — being more than two but fewer than many in number or kind: several ways of doing it.
  • shoaler — a place where a sea, river, or other body of water is shallow.
  • sideral — attributed to the influence of the stars
  • slabber — slobber
  • slacker — a slack condition or part.
  • slammer — a person or thing that slams.
  • slander — defamation; calumny: rumors full of slander.
  • slanger — a street vendor
  • slanter — to veer or angle away from a given level or line, especially from a horizontal; slope.
  • slapper — a sharp blow or smack, especially with the open hand or with something flat.
  • slasher — a person or thing that slashes.
  • slather — to spread or apply thickly: to slather butter on toast.
  • slatter — to be slovenly in dress
  • slavery — the condition of a slave; bondage.
  • smaller — of limited size; of comparatively restricted dimensions; not big; little: a small box.
  • snarler — to growl threateningly or viciously, especially with a raised upper lip to bare the teeth, as a dog.
  • spaller — a person or thing that spalls
  • sparkle — to issue in or as if in little sparks, as fire or light: The candlelight sparkled in the crystal.
  • spheral — of or relating to a sphere.
  • stabler — a person who runs a horse stable.
  • stalker — a person who pursues game, prey, or a person stealthily.
  • stapler — a person who staples wool.
  • starlet — a young actress promoted and publicized as a future star, especially in motion pictures.
  • startle — to disturb or agitate suddenly as by surprise or alarm.
  • statlerEllsworth Milton, 1863–1928, U.S. hotel-chain developer.
  • stealer — to take (the property of another or others) without permission or right, especially secretly or by force: A pickpocket stole his watch.
  • stellar — of or relating to the stars; consisting of stars.
  • sternal — of or relating to the sternum.
  • surreal — of, relating to, or characteristic of surrealism, an artistic and literary style; surrealistic.
  • tablier — (formerly) a part of a dress resembling an apron
  • tallier — an account or reckoning; a record of debit and credit, of the score of a game, or the like.
  • tangler — to bring together into a mass of confusedly interlaced or intertwisted threads, strands, or other like parts; snarl.
  • tarbellIda Minerva, 1857–1944, U.S. author.
  • tarheel — a native or inhabitant of North Carolina (used as a nickname).
  • tarseal — the bitumen surface of a road
  • tartlet — a small pie.
  • tattler — a person who tattles; telltale.
  • tearful — full of tears; weeping.
  • tegular — pertaining to or resembling a tile.
  • teleran — a navigational aid that uses radar to map the sky above an airfield, which, together with a map of the airfield itself, is transmitted by television to aircraft approaching the field.
  • telerat — (abuse, hardware)   /tel'*-rat/ Unflattering hackerism for "Teleray", a line of extremely losing terminals.
  • telstar — either of two low-altitude active communications satellites launched in 1962 and 1963 by the US and used in the transmission of television programmes, telephone messages, etc
  • templar — a member of a religious military order founded by Crusaders in Jerusalem about 1118, and suppressed in 1312.
  • tertial — pertaining to any of a set of flight feathers situated on the basal segment of a bird's wing.
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