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

  • resight — the power or faculty of seeing; perception of objects by use of the eyes; vision.
  • respite — a delay or cessation for a time, especially of anything distressing or trying; an interval of relief: to toil without respite.
  • resplit — to split again
  • restain — a discoloration produced by foreign matter having penetrated into or chemically reacted with a material; a spot not easily removed.
  • resting — that rests; not active.
  • restive — impatient of control, restraint, or delay, as persons; restless; uneasy.
  • retsina — a strong, resinated white or red wine of Greece and Cyprus.
  • retwist — to twist again
  • 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
  • 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.
  • roister — to act in a swaggering, boisterous, or uproarious manner.
  • sainted — enrolled among the saints.
  • salient — prominent or conspicuous: salient traits.
  • saltier — tasting of or containing salt; saline.
  • saltine — a crisp, salted cracker.
  • 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.
  • samnite — an ancient country in central Italy.
  • sapient — having or showing great wisdom or sound judgment.
  • satiate — to supply with anything to excess, so as to disgust or weary; surfeit.
  • satiety — the state of being satiated; surfeit.
  • satinet — a satin-weave fabric made with cotton warp and wool filling, fulled and finished to resemble wool.
  • satires — the use of irony, sarcasm, ridicule, or the like, in exposing, denouncing, or deriding vice, folly, etc.
  • sceptic — a person who questions the validity or authenticity of something purporting to be factual.
  • scottie — Scottish terrier.
  • seagirt — surrounded by the sea.
  • sealift — a system for transporting persons or cargo by ship, especially in an emergency.
  • seating — something designed to support a person in a sitting position, as a chair, bench, or pew; a place on or in which one sits.
  • sectile — capable of being cut smoothly with a knife.
  • section — a part that is cut off or separated.
  • see fit — to consider proper, desirable, etc
  • seifert — Jaroslav [yah-raw-slahf] /ˈyɑ rɔ slɑf/ (Show IPA), 1901–1986, Czech poet: Nobel prize 1984.
  • selfist — a selfish person
  • sematic — serving as a sign or warning of danger, as the conspicuous colors or markings of certain poisonous animals.
  • semifit — not fully fit; partially in shape
  • semifit — not fully fit; partially in shape
  • semitic — a subfamily of Afroasiatic languages that includes Akkadian, Arabic, Aramaic, Ethiopic, Hebrew, and Phoenician.
  • septime — the seventh of eight defensive positions.
  • seriate — arranged or occurring in one or more series.
  • servite — a member of an order of mendicant friars, founded in Florence in 1233, engaged in fostering devotion to the Virgin Mary.
  • sestina — a poem of six six-line stanzas and a three-line envoy, originally without rhyme, in which each stanza repeats the end words of the lines of the first stanza, but in different order, the envoy using the six words again, three in the middle of the lines and three at the end.
  • setaria — any grass of the genus Setaria, having a dense panicle, grown for forage.
  • setline — any of various types of fishing line that consist of a long line suspended across a stream, between buoys, etc, and having shorter hooked and baited lines attached
  • setting — the act or state of setting or the state of being set.
  • sexiest — concerned predominantly or excessively with sex; risqué: a sexy novel.
  • sextain — a stanza of six lines.
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