7-letter words containing s, o, r, t, e
- settlor — a person who makes a settlement of property.
- sheroot — a cigar having open, untapered ends.
- shertok — Moshe [moh-shuh] /ˈmoʊ ʃə/ (Show IPA), Sharett, Moshe.
- shooter — a person who shoots with a gun, bow, etc.: efforts to capture the shooter.
- shorted — having little length; not long.
- shorten — to make short or shorter.
- shorter — something that is short.
- shortie — a person of less than average stature (sometimes used as a disparaging and offensive term of address).
- siroset — of or relating to the chemical treatment of woollen fabrics to give a permanent-press effect, or a garment so treated
- slotter — a person or thing that slots.
- smother — to stifle or suffocate, as by smoke or other means of preventing free breathing.
- snorted — (of animals) to force the breath violently through the nostrils with a loud, harsh sound: The spirited horse snorted and shied at the train.
- snorter — a person or thing that snorts.
- snotter — to breathe through obstructed nostrils
- soother — truth, reality, or fact.
- sorbate — a sorbed substance.
- sorbent — a surface that sorbs.
- sorbite — a hexahydric alcohol
- sorites — a form of argument having several premises and one conclusion, capable of being resolved into a chain of syllogisms, the conclusion of each of which is a premise of the next.
- sothern — E(dward) H(ugh) 1859–1933, U.S. actor, born in England: husband of Julia Marlowe.
- souther — a wind or storm from the south.
- soutter — a person who makes or repairs shoes; cobbler; shoemaker.
- spector — Phil. born 1940, US record producer and songwriter, noted for the densely orchestrated "Wall of Sound" in his work with groups such as the Ronettes and the Crystals; convicted in 2009 for the second-degree murder (2003) of actress Lana Clarkson
- sported — an athletic activity requiring skill or physical prowess and often of a competitive nature, as racing, baseball, tennis, golf, bowling, wrestling, boxing, hunting, fishing, etc.
- sporter — an athletic activity requiring skill or physical prowess and often of a competitive nature, as racing, baseball, tennis, golf, bowling, wrestling, boxing, hunting, fishing, etc.
- spotter — a person employed to remove spots from clothing, especially at a dry-cleaning establishment.
- spouter — to emit or discharge forcibly (a liquid, granulated substance, etc.) in a stream or jet.
- stensor — L. Hornfeldt, Stockholm, mid-80's. Symbolic math, especially General Relativity. Implemented on top of SHEEP and MACSYMA.
- stentor — (in the Iliad) a Greek herald with a loud voice.
- stereo- — indicating three-dimensional quality or solidity
- sterno- — sternum, sternum and
- steroid — any of a large group of fat-soluble organic compounds, as the sterols, bile acids, and sex hormones, most of which have specific physiological action.
- stertor — a heavy snoring sound accompanying respiration in certain diseases.
- stocker — a supply of goods kept on hand for sale to customers by a merchant, distributor, manufacturer, etc.; inventory.
- stodger — a dull or lifeless person
- stoiter — a lurch or unsteady movement, a stumble
- stomper — stamp (defs 1–3).
- stonker — to hit hard; knock unconscious.
- stooker — shock2 (def 1).
- stooper — to bend the head and shoulders, or the body generally, forward and downward from an erect position: to stoop over a desk.
- stoozer — a person who stoozes
- stopper — a person or thing that stops.
- storage — the act of storing; state or fact of being stored: All my furniture is in storage.
- storied — having stories or floors (often used in combination): a two-storied house.
- stories — a narrative, either true or fictitious, in prose or verse, designed to interest, amuse, or instruct the hearer or reader; tale.
- stormer — an outstanding example of its kind
- stotter — to stagger
- stouter — bulky in figure; heavily built; corpulent; thickset; fat: She is getting too stout for her dresses. Synonyms: big, rotund, stocky, portly, fleshy. Antonyms: thin, lean, slender, slim; skinny, scrawny.
- stretto — the close overlapping of statements of the subject in a fugue, each voice entering immediately after the preceding one.
- strobes — Shared Time Repair of Big Electronic Systems