7-letter words containing s, h, i, t, a
- scythia — the ancient name of a region in SE Europe and Asia, between the Black and Aral seas.
- shaitan — Ash-Shaytān.
- shantih — peace.
- shastri — Lal Bahadur [lahl bah-hah-doo r] /lɑl bɑˈhɑ dʊər/ (Show IPA), 1904–66, Indian statesman: prime minister 1964–66.
- sheitan — Ash-Shaytān.
- shiatsu — a Japanese massage technique that includes the use of acupressure.
- shiatzu — a Japanese massage technique that includes the use of acupressure.
- shitcan — to dismiss from a job or position.
- shittah — a tree, said to be an acacia, probably Acacia seyal, that yielded the shittim wood of the Old Testament.
- shortia — an evergreen herb native to eastern North America and temperate Asia, with white, pink, or blue flowers
- spathic — like spar.
- staithe — a wharf, where ships can moor and unload or load
- sthenia — strength; excessive vital force.
- synthia — the informal name for a self-replicating synthetic bacterium, created in 2010 from a version of the Mycoplasma mycoides genome and implanted into a DNA-free Mycoplasma capricolum bacterial shell. It is the world’s first artificial life form
- tachism — action painting (def 1).
- tajrish — a city in NW Iran, near Teheran.
- tallish — rather tall.
- tannish — somewhat tan: a tannish belt.
- tarnish — to dull the luster of (a metallic surface), especially by oxidation; discolor.
- tharsis — Tarshish.
- that is — (used with adjectives and adverbs of quantity or extent) to the extent or degree indicated: that much; The fish was that big.
- thiasus — (in ancient Greece) a congregation of people who have gathered to sing and dance at a festival in honour of a god
- trishaw — pedicab.
- ushabti — shawabti.
- ustashi — (formerly) a terrorist organization of right-wing Yugoslav exiles dedicated to the overthrow of Communism in their homeland
- washita — Ouachita.
- whatsis — a thing or object whose name one does not know or cannot recall.
- whatsit — whatsis.
- wraiths — Plural form of wraith.
- yahwist — a writer of the earliest major source of the Hexateuch, in which God is characteristically referred to as Yahweh rather than Elohim.