7-letter words containing s, e, r, u, l
- lurkers — Plural form of lurker.
- lurries — Plural form of lurry.
- lusters — Plural form of luster.
- lustier — Comparative form of lusty.
- lustred — Having a lustre.
- lustres — Plural form of lustre.
- maulers — a heavy hammer, as for driving stakes or wedges.
- misrule — bad or unwise rule; misgovernment.
- nurdles — Plural form of nurdle.
- ourself — Used instead of “ ourselves, ” typically when “ we ” refers to people in general rather than a definite group of people.
- pelorus — a device for measuring in degrees the relative bearings of observed objects.
- perusal — a reading: a perusal of the current books.
- quarles — Francis, 1592–1644, English poet.
- recluse — a person who lives in seclusion or apart from society, often for religious meditation.
- recusal — the disqualification of a judge for a particular lawsuit or proceeding, especially due to some possible conflict of interest or prejudice.
- refusal — an act or instance of refusing.
- regulus — (initial capital letter) Astronomy. a first magnitude star in the constellation Leo.
- repulse — to drive back; repel: to repulse an assailant.
- restful — giving or conducive to rest.
- results — good results; success
- roulers — a city in NW Belgium: battles 1914, 1918.
- roussel — Albert (Charles Paul Mari) [al-ber sharl pawl ma-ree] /alˈbɛr ʃarl pɔl maˈri/ (Show IPA), 1869–1937, French composer.
- rubbles — broken bits and pieces of anything, as that which is demolished: Bombing reduced the town to rubble.
- ruggles — Carl, 1876–1971, U.S. composer.
- runless — without having scored a run; without runs: a runless inning.
- russell — Bertrand (Arthur William), 3rd Earl, 1872–1970, English philosopher, mathematician, and author: Nobel Prize in literature 1950.
- rustler — a cattle thief.
- scruple — a moral or ethical consideration or standard that acts as a restraining force or inhibits certain actions.
- sculker — one who skulks
- secular — of or relating to worldly things or to things that are not regarded as religious, spiritual, or sacred; temporal: secular interests.
- 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.
- silures — a powerful and warlike tribe of ancient Britain, living chiefly in SE Wales, who fiercely resisted Roman invaders in the 1st century ad.
- skudler — a leader of a festive procession
- skulker — to lie or keep in hiding, as for some evil reason: The thief skulked in the shadows.
- slubber — to perform hastily or carelessly.
- slugger — a person who strikes hard, especially a boxer noted for the ability to deliver hard punches.
- slumber — to sleep, especially lightly; doze; drowse.
- slummer — Often, slums. a thickly populated, run-down, squalid part of a city, inhabited by poor people.
- slurper — a person who slurps his or her food or drink
- slurred — to pass over lightly or without due mention or consideration (often followed by over): The report slurred over her contribution to the enterprise.
- soilure — a stain.
- soleure — French name of Solothurn.
- splurge — to indulge oneself in some luxury or pleasure, especially a costly one: They splurged on a trip to Europe.
- sporule — a spore, especially a small one.
- spurtle — a stick used to stir porridge.
- strudel — a pastry, usually consisting of a fruit, cheese, or other mixture, rolled in a paper-thin sheet of dough and baked.
- subrule — a principle or regulation governing conduct, action, procedure, arrangement, etc.: the rules of chess.
- subtler — thin, tenuous, or rarefied, as a fluid or an odor.
- suckler — an animal that suckles its young; mammal.