7-letter words containing s, i, r, e, t
- striate — to mark with striae; furrow; stripe; streak.
- strider — to walk with long steps, as with vigor, haste, impatience, or arrogance.
- strides — men's trousers
- striker — a person or thing that strikes.
- striped — having stripes or bands.
- striper — Military. a naval officer whose uniform sleeve displays stripes: a four-striper. an enlisted person of any of the armed services whose sleeve displays stripes denoting years of service: a six-striper.
- stripes — a strip of magnetic material on which information may be stored, as by an electromagnetic process, for automatic reading, decoding, or recognition by a device that detects magnetic variations on the strip: a credit card with a magnetic strip to prevent counterfeiting.
- strived — to exert oneself vigorously; try hard: He strove to make himself understood.
- striven — to exert oneself vigorously; try hard: He strove to make himself understood.
- striver — to exert oneself vigorously; try hard: He strove to make himself understood.
- strives — vigorous or bitter conflict, discord, or antagonism: to be at strife.
- studier — application of the mind to the acquisition of knowledge, as by reading, investigation, or reflection: long hours of study.
- stuiver — stiver (def 1).
- surfeit — excess; an excessive amount: a surfeit of speechmaking.
- swifter — moving or capable of moving with great speed or velocity; fleet; rapid: a swift ship.
- swither — a state of confusion, excitement, or perplexity.
- switzer — Swiss (def 2).
- tarries — to remain or stay, as in a place; sojourn: He tarried in Baltimore on his way to Washington.
- tarsier — a small, arboreal, nocturnal primate of the genus Tarsius, of Indonesia and the Philippines, having a long thin tail, very large immobile eyes, and prominent pads on the fingers and toes: all populations are dwindling.
- tastier — good-tasting; savory: a tasty canapé.
- teniers — David [dey-vid;; Flemish dah-vit;; French dah-veed] /ˈdeɪ vɪd;; Flemish ˈdɑ vɪt;; French dɑˈvid/ (Show IPA), ("the Elder") 1582–1649, Flemish painter and engraver.
- terries — the loop formed by the pile of a fabric when left uncut.
- tersion — the action of rubbing off or wiping
- tertius — third (in a group)
- thrives — to prosper; be fortunate or successful.
- tigress — a female tiger.
- tipster — a person who makes a business of furnishing tips, as for betting or speculation.
- tirasse — a mechanism in a musical organ connecting two pedals, so that both may be pressed down at once
- torsive — twisted
- traipse — to walk or go aimlessly or idly or without finding or reaching one's goal: We traipsed all over town looking for a copy of the book.
- trellis — a frame or structure of latticework; lattice.
- trenise — one of the figures in a quadrille
- treviso — a city in NE Italy.
- treviss — a partition in a stable for keeping animals apart
- triceps — a muscle having three heads or points of origin, especially the muscle on the back of the arm, the action of which straightens the elbow.
- trieste — a seaport in NE Italy, on the Gulf of Trieste.
- triones — the seven principal stars of the constellation Ursa Major
- trisect — to divide into three parts, especially into three equal parts.
- triseme — a metrical foot of a length equal to three short syllables
- trisome — a trisomic individual.
- twister — a person or thing that twists.
- ventris — Michael George Francis, 1922–56, English architect and linguist.
- veriest — precise; particular: That is the very item we want.
- veritas — truth.
- virtues — moral excellence; goodness; righteousness.
- waister — (nautical) A seaman stationed in the waist of a warship.
- waiters — Plural form of waiter.
- wariest — watchful; being on one's guard against danger.
- winters — the cold season between autumn and spring in northern latitudes (in the Northern Hemisphere from the winter solstice to the vernal equinox; in the Southern Hemisphere from the summer solstice to the autumnal equinox).
- withers — George, 1588–1667, English poet and pamphleteer.