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7-letter words containing r, i, f, t

  • frantic — desperate or wild with excitement, passion, fear, pain, etc.; frenzied.
  • freight — goods, cargo, or lading transported for pay, whether by water, land, or air.
  • frigate — a fast naval vessel of the late 18th and early 19th centuries, generally having a lofty ship rig and heavily armed on one or two decks.
  • frights — Plural form of fright.
  • frippet — a pretty, frivolous young woman.
  • frisket — a mask of thin paper laid over an illustration to shield certain areas when using an airbrush.
  • fritfly — a small black dipterous fly, Oscinella frit, whose larvae are destructive to barley, wheat, rye, oats, etc: family Chloropidae
  • fritted — Simple past tense and past participle of frit.
  • fritter — to squander or disperse piecemeal; waste little by little (usually followed by away): to fritter away one's money; to fritter away an afternoon.
  • frogbit — an aquatic, floating plant, Hydrocharis morsus-ranae, of Eurasia, having thick, roundish, spongy leaves.
  • frontis — the front wall of a cancha or jai alai court. Compare rebote (def 1).
  • fruited — having or bearing fruit.
  • fruiter — a cargo vessel carrying fruit.
  • frutify — a malapropism for notify
  • furmint — a variety of grape from which Tokay is made.
  • furmity — a dish of hulled wheat boiled in milk and seasoned with sugar, cinnamon, and raisins.
  • fursuit — (slang) An animal outfit used in the furry subculture.
  • furtive — taken, done, used, etc., surreptitiously or by stealth; secret: a furtive glance.
  • gratify — to give pleasure to (a person or persons) by satisfying desires or humoring inclinations or feelings: Her praise will gratify all who worked so hard to earn it.
  • grifted — Simple past tense and past participle of grift.
  • grifter — a person who operates a side show at a circus, fair, etc., especially a gambling attraction.
  • heftier — Comparative form of hefty.
  • indraft — an inward flow or current, as of air or water.
  • infarct — a localized area of tissue, as in the heart or kidney, that is dying or dead, having been deprived of its blood supply because of an obstruction by embolism or thrombosis.
  • infract — to break, violate, or infringe (a law, commitment, etc.).
  • ingraft — engraft.
  • introfy — to improve the ability of (a sanitary towel, nappy, etc) to absorb liquid
  • lifters — Plural form of lifter.
  • loftier — extending high in the air; of imposing height; towering: lofty mountains.
  • metrify — to put into meter; compose in verse.
  • mitfordMary Russell, 1787–1855, English novelist, poet, playwright, and essayist.
  • mortify — to humiliate or shame, as by injury to one's pride or self-respect.
  • nitrify — to oxidize (ammonia, ammonium compounds, or atmospheric nitrogen) to nitrites, nitrates, or their respective acids, especially by bacterial action.
  • outfire — (Sussex) A visit by one bonfire society to join in with the celebrations of another.
  • overfit — too fit
  • parfait — a dessert of ice cream and fruit or ice cream and syrup in alternate layers, often topped with whipped cream and served in a tall, narrow, short-stemmed glass.
  • petrify — to convert into stone or a stony substance.
  • piefort — piedfort.
  • presift — to sift something preliminarily
  • rafting — a more or less rigid floating platform made of buoyant material or materials: an inflatable rubber raft.
  • ratafia — a sweet liqueur made from wine or grape juice combined with brandy or other spirits and often flavored with almonds, fruit, or fruit kernels.
  • ratfink — fink (defs 3, 4).
  • ratfish — a chimaera, Hydrolagus colliei, of the Pacific Ocean from Alaska to Baja California, having a ratlike tail.
  • re-gift — an unwanted gift that is given away.
  • rectify — to make, put, or set right; remedy; correct: He sent them a check to rectify his account.
  • refight — to fight (someone or something) again
  • rifting — an opening made by splitting, cleaving, etc.; fissure; cleft; chink.
  • rotifer — any microscopic animal of the phylum (or class) Rotifera, found in fresh and salt waters, having one or more rings of cilia on the anterior end.
  • seifert — Jaroslav [yah-raw-slahf] /ˈyɑ rɔ slɑf/ (Show IPA), 1901–1986, Czech poet: Nobel prize 1984.
  • shifter — a person or thing that shifts.
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