7-letter words containing r, i, t, l
- triaryl — containing three aryl groups.
- tribble — (in paper manufacture) a frame for drying paper
- triblet — a spindle or mandrel used in making rings, tubes, etc
- trickle — to flow or fall by drops, or in a small, gentle stream: Tears trickled down her cheeks.
- triclad — a planarian.
- triella — three nominated horse races in which the punter bets on selecting the three winners
- trifled — an article or thing of very little value.
- trifler — an article or thing of very little value.
- trifold — triple; threefold.
- triglot — a book in three languages
- trilled — to cause to flow in a thin stream.
- triller — someone who trills
- trilobe — anything with three lobes, esp a leaf
- trilogy — a series or group of three plays, novels, operas, etc., that, although individually complete, are closely related in theme, sequence, or the like.
- trimble — David, born 1944, Northern Ireland politician: Nobel prize 1998.
- trindle — British Dialect. a wheel, especially of a wheelbarrow.
- tringle — a narrow, straight molding, as a fillet.
- triolet — a short poem of fixed form, having a rhyme scheme of ab, aa, abab, and having the first line repeated as the fourth and seventh lines, and the second line repeated as the eighth.
- tripled — threefold; consisting of three parts: a triple knot.
- triplet — one of three children or offspring born at the same birth.
- triplex — threefold; triple.
- tripoli — Ancient Geography. the part of N Africa W of Egypt.
- tripple — a horse's gait, similar to an amble
- tritely — lacking in freshness or effectiveness because of constant use or excessive repetition; hackneyed; stale: the trite phrases in his letter.
- trivial — of very little importance or value; insignificant: Don't bother me with trivial matters.
- troilus — a warrior son of Priam, mentioned by Homer and Vergil and later represented as the lover of Cressida.
- troolie — an extremely large palm leaf from a C and S American tree (Manicaria saccifera)
- trysail — a triangular or quadrilateral sail having its luff hooped or otherwise bent to a mast, used for lying to or keeping a vessel headed into the wind; spencer.
- tumbril — one of the carts used during the French Revolution to convey victims to the guillotine.
- turmoil — a state of great commotion, confusion, or disturbance; tumult; agitation; disquiet: mental turmoil caused by difficult decisions.
- twirler — a person or thing that twirls.
- uralite — a fibrous, dark-green hornblende formed by the hydrothermal alteration of pyroxene.
- urolith — a urinary calculus.
- utricle — a small sac or baglike body, as an air-filled cavity in a seaweed.
- utrillo — Maurice [maw-rees;; French maw-rees] /mɔˈris;; French mɔˈris/ (Show IPA), 1883–1955, French painter (son of Suzanne Valadon).
- virtual — being such in power, force, or effect, though not actually or expressly such: a virtual dependence on charity.
- vitrail — stained glass
- vitriol — Chemistry. any of certain metallic sulfates of glassy appearance, as copper sulfate or blue vitriol, iron sulfate or green vitriol, zinc sulfate or white vitriol, etc.
- wilbert — a masculine name