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7-letter words containing r, e, s, t

  • results — good results; success
  • retaste — to try or test the flavor or quality of (something) by taking some into the mouth: to taste food.
  • retsina — a strong, resinated white or red wine of Greece and Cyprus.
  • returns — profits accruing from an investment
  • retwist — to twist again
  • reuters — a publicly owned international news and information company established in London, 1851.
  • revisit — to go to and stay with (a person or family) or at (a place) for a short time for reasons of sociability, politeness, business, curiosity, etc.: to visit a friend; to visit clients; to visit Paris.
  • revuist — someone who writes revues or light theatre consisting of satirical sketches
  • rhetors — a master or teacher of rhetoric.
  • richest — having wealth or great possessions; abundantly supplied with resources, means, or funds; wealthy: a rich man; a rich nation.
  • rickets — a disease of childhood, characterized by softening of the bones as a result of inadequate intake of vitamin D and insufficient exposure to sunlight, also associated with impaired calcium and phosphorus metabolism.
  • riotise — riotous behaviour and excess
  • riposte — a quick, sharp return in speech or action; counterstroke: a brilliant riposte to an insult.
  • rise to — to get up from a lying, sitting, or kneeling posture; assume an upright position: She rose and walked over to greet me. With great effort he rose to his knees.
  • roaster — roasted meat or a piece of roasted meat, as a piece of beef or veal of a quantity and shape for slicing into more than one portion.
  • roberts — Henry Martyn [mahr-tn] /ˈmɑr tn/ (Show IPA), 1837–1923, U.S. engineer and authority on parliamentary procedure: author of Robert's Rules of Order (1876, revised 1915).
  • rodents — belonging or pertaining to the gnawing or nibbling mammals of the order Rodentia, including the mice, squirrels, beavers, etc.
  • rodster — an angler or fisherman
  • roister — to act in a swaggering, boisterous, or uproarious manner.
  • roosted — a perch upon which birds or fowls rest at night.
  • rooster — the male of domestic fowl and certain game birds; cock.
  • roseate — tinged with rose; rosy: a roseate dawn.
  • rosetta — a town in N Egypt, at a mouth of the Nile.
  • rosette — a female given name.
  • rouster — roustabout (def 1).
  • royster — roister.
  • rustler — a cattle thief.
  • sakeret — the male saker
  • saltern — a saltworks.
  • saltier — tasting of or containing salt; saline.
  • saltire — an ordinary in the form of a cross with arms running diagonally from the dexter chief to the sinister base and from the sinister chief to the dexter base; St. Andrew's cross.
  • santera — a priestess of Santería.
  • santero — a priest of Santería.
  • sargent — Sir (Harold) Malcolm (Watts) 1895–1967, English conductor.
  • sarment — a thin stem or runner that forms a new plant
  • sarsnet — sarcenet.
  • satires — the use of irony, sarcasm, ridicule, or the like, in exposing, denouncing, or deriding vice, folly, etc.
  • saunter — to walk with a leisurely gait; stroll: sauntering through the woods.
  • scanter — barely sufficient in amount or quantity; not abundant; almost inadequate: to do scant justice.
  • scarlet — a bright-red color inclining toward orange.
  • scatter — to throw loosely about; distribute at irregular intervals: to scatter seeds.
  • scepter — a rod or wand borne in the hand as an emblem of regal or imperial power.
  • sceptre — to give a scepter to; invest with authority.
  • scooter — a child's vehicle that typically has two wheels with a low footboard between them, is steered by a handlebar, and is propelled by pushing one foot against the ground while resting the other on the footboard.
  • scouter — a person who scouts.
  • scutter — scurry.
  • scyther — a scythe user
  • seagirt — surrounded by the sea.
  • seaport — a port or harbor on or accessible to a seacoast and providing accommodation for seagoing vessels.
  • secreta — secretions of cells, tissues or organs
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