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7-letter words containing s, o, t, h

  • shooter — a person who shoots with a gun, bow, etc.: efforts to capture the shooter.
  • shootie — a woman's shoe that reaches, covers, or extends just above the ankle.
  • shopbot — a website that offers price comparisons for particular products
  • shorted — having little length; not long.
  • shorten — to make short or shorter.
  • shorter — something that is short.
  • shortia — an evergreen herb native to eastern North America and temperate Asia, with white, pink, or blue flowers
  • shortie — a person of less than average stature (sometimes used as a disparaging and offensive term of address).
  • shortly — in a short time; soon.
  • shot up — to hit, wound, damage, kill, or destroy with a missile discharged from a weapon.
  • shotgun — a smoothbore gun for firing small shots to kill birds and small quadrupeds, though often used with buckshot to kill larger animals.
  • shotten — (of fish, especially herring) having recently ejected the spawn.
  • shottle — a small drawer in a chest for keeping money and small or special things
  • shut of — rid of; free from
  • shutoff — an object or device that shuts (something) off: the automatic shutoff on a heater.
  • shutout — an act or instance of shutting out.
  • sithole — Ndabaningi (əndabaˈnɪŋɡɪ). 1920–2000, Zimbabwean clergyman and politician; leader of the Zimbabwe African National Union (1963–74). He was one of the negotiators of the internal settlement (1978) to pave the way for Black majority rule in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe)
  • smoothy — smoothie.
  • smother — to stifle or suffocate, as by smoke or other means of preventing free breathing.
  • so that — in the way or manner indicated, described, or implied: Do it so.
  • so what — the true nature or identity of something, or the sum of its characteristics: a lecture on the whats and hows of crop rotation.
  • softish — somewhat or relatively soft.
  • soothed — to tranquilize or calm, as a person or the feelings; relieve, comfort, or refresh: soothing someone's anger; to soothe someone with a hot drink.
  • soother — truth, reality, or fact.
  • sophist — (often initial capital letter) Greek History. any of a class of professional teachers in ancient Greece who gave instruction in various fields, as in general culture, rhetoric, politics, or disputation. a person belonging to this class at a later period who, while professing to teach skill in reasoning, concerned himself with ingenuity and specious effectiveness rather than soundness of argument.
  • sopwith — Sir Thomas Octave Murdoch. 1888–1989, British aircraft designer, who built the Sopwith Camel biplane used during World War I. He was chairman (1935–63) of the Hawker Siddeley Group, which developed the Hurricane fighter
  • sothern — E(dward) H(ugh) 1859–1933, U.S. actor, born in England: husband of Julia Marlowe.
  • sottish — stupefied with or as if with drink; drunken.
  • souther — a wind or storm from the south.
  • southeyRobert, 1774–1843, English poet and prose writer: poet laureate 1813–43.
  • splotch — a large, irregular spot; blot; stain; blotch.
  • st john — island of the Virgin Islands of the U.S.: 20 sq mi (52 sq km); pop. 4,200
  • statohm — the electrostatic unit of resistance, equivalent to 8.9876 × 10 11 ohms and equal to the resistance in a conductor in which one statvolt of potential difference produces a current of one statampere.
  • stetho- — chest, breast
  • stichos — a verse or a short poetic line
  • stomach — Anatomy, Zoology. a saclike enlargement of the alimentary canal, as in humans and certain animals, forming an organ for storing, diluting, and digesting food. such an organ or an analogous portion of the alimentary canal when divided into two or more sections or parts. any one of these sections.
  • strophe — the part of an ancient Greek choral ode sung by the chorus when moving from right to left.
  • succoth — Sukkoth.
  • suharto — 1921–2008, Indonesian army officer and political leader: president 1967–98.
  • sukkoth — a Jewish festival beginning on the 15th day of the month of Tishri and celebrated for nine days by Orthodox and Conservative Jews outside of Israel and for eight days by Reform Jews and by Jews in Israel that celebrates the harvest and commemorates the period during which the Jews wandered in the wilderness after the Exodus, marked by the building of sukkoth.
  • synthol — a synthetic motor fuel produced by heating, under pressure, hydrogen and carbon monoxide in the presence of a catalyst.
  • synthon — a component of a molecule to be synthesized that plays an active role in synthesis
  • teashop — a tearoom.
  • the son — Jesus Christ, as the second person of the Trinity
  • thermos — a vacuum bottle or similar container lined with an insulating material, such as polystyrene, to keep liquids hot or cold.
  • thjorsa — a river in central Iceland, flowing SW to the Atlantic Ocean. About 143 miles (230 km) long.
  • thomism — the theological and philosophical system of Thomas Aquinas.
  • thomsen — Christian Jürgensen [kris-tyahn yoor-guh n-suh n] /ˈkrɪs tyɑn ˈyur gən sən/ (Show IPA), 1788–1865, Danish archaeologist.
  • thomsonElihu, 1853–1937, U.S. inventor, born in England.
  • thronos — an ancient Greek chair, usually highly ornamented, having a high seat and back and rectangular turned or carved legs ending in animal feet.
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