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7-letter words containing s, p

  • pasqual — ["Pasqual: A Proposed Generalization of Pascal", R.D. Tennent, TR75-32, Queen's U, Canada, 1975].
  • pasquilJohn, 1752–1835, English architect and city planner.
  • pass by — go past
  • pass on — to move past; go by: to pass another car on the road.
  • pass up — to move past; go by: to pass another car on the road.
  • passade — a turn or course of a horse backward or forward on the same ground.
  • passado — a forward thrust with the weapon while advancing with one foot.
  • passage — a slow, cadenced trot executed with great elevation of the feet and characterized by a moment of suspension before the feet strike the ground.
  • passaic — a city in NE New Jersey.
  • passant — (of a beast) represented as in the act of walking, with one forepaw raised.
  • passata — a sauce made from sieved tomatoes, often used in Italian cookery
  • passing — going by or past; elapsing: He was feeling better with each passing day.
  • passion — any powerful or compelling emotion or feeling, as love or hate.
  • passive — not reacting visibly to something that might be expected to produce manifestations of an emotion or feeling.
  • passkey — master key.
  • passman — (at Oxford and Cambridge Universities) a (male) student who passes without honours
  • passout — to move past; go by: to pass another car on the road.
  • past it — If you say that someone or something is past it, they are no longer able to do what they used to do.
  • pastern — the part of the foot of a horse, cow, etc., between the fetlock and the hoof.
  • pasteurLouis [loo-ee;; French lwee] /ˈlu i;; French lwi/ (Show IPA), 1822–95, French chemist and bacteriologist.
  • pasties — of or like paste in consistency, texture, color, etc.
  • pastime — something that serves to make time pass agreeably; a pleasant means of amusement, recreation, or sport: to play cards as a pastime.
  • pastina — very small pieces of pasta in various shapes, used especially in soups.
  • pasting — a mixture of flour and water, often with starch or the like, used for causing paper or other material to adhere to something.
  • pastose — having a heavy impasto.
  • pasture — Rogier [French raw-zhee-ey] /French rɔ ʒiˈeɪ/ (Show IPA), or Roger [French raw-zhey] /French rɔˈʒeɪ/ (Show IPA), de la [French duh-la] /French də la/ (Show IPA), Weyden, Rogier van der.
  • patness — the characteristic of being pat; appropriateness; aptness
  • pattens — any of various kinds of footwear, as a wooden shoe, a shoe with a wooden sole, a chopine, etc., to protect the feet from mud or wetness.
  • pattles — paddle1 (def 11).
  • paulist — a member of the “Missionary Society of St. Paul the Apostle,” a community of priests founded in New York in 1858.
  • paviser — a soldier bearing or using a pavise
  • paylist — a list of people to be paid
  • paypass — a type of wave-and-pay system that employs RDIF technology, and allows shoppers to pay for low-value goods by touching their debit or credit card against an electronic reader
  • paysage — a landscape or representation of a landscape
  • payslip — paper slip detailing wage payment
  • paystub — A paystub is a piece of paper given to an employee when he or she is paid stating how much money has been earned and how much has been taken from that sum for things such as tax.
  • pci bus — Peripheral Component Interconnect
  • pe-tsai — Chinese cabbage.
  • peakish — to become weak, thin, and sickly.
  • peanuts — the pod or the enclosed edible seed of the plant, Arachis hypogaea, of the legume family: the pod is forced underground in growing, where it ripens.
  • pearsonDrew (Andrew Russell Pearson) 1897–1969, U.S. journalist.
  • peasant — a member of a class of persons, as in Europe, Asia, and Latin America, who are small farmers or farm laborers of low social rank.
  • peckish — somewhat hungry: By noon we were feeling a bit peckish.
  • pectase — an enzyme occurring in various fruits and involved in the formation of pectic acid from pectin.
  • pectose — protopectin.
  • pectous — of, relating to, or consisting of pectin or protopectin.
  • pedesis — the random motion of particles in a liquid or gas; Brownian motion
  • peebles — a historic county in S Scotland.
  • peepers — a person who peeps in an abnormally prying manner; a voyeur.
  • peeress — the wife or widow of a peer.
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