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10-letter words containing s, t, a, y, e

  • somatotype — (of humans) physical type; physique.
  • soothsayer — a person who professes to foretell events.
  • spare tyre — A spare tyre is a wheel with a tyre on it that you keep in your car in case you get a flat tyre and need to replace one of your wheels.
  • speciality — specialty.
  • spectrally — of or relating to a specter; ghostly; phantom.
  • splay-feet — a broad, flat foot, especially one turned outward.
  • spycatcher — a person who works in counterintelligence to detect enemy espionage activities
  • stable boy — A stable boy is a young man who works in a stable looking after the horses.
  • stable fly — a blood-sucking muscid fly, Stomoxys calcitrans, that attacks man and domestic animals
  • stake body — an open truck body having a platform with sockets at the edge into which upright stakes may be placed to form a fence around a load.
  • stalk-eyed — having the eyes located on pedicels, as some crustaceans and dipterans.
  • stand easy — a command to soldiers standing at ease that they may relax further
  • staphyline — having a form resembling a bunch of grapes
  • starchedly — in a starched manner
  • stationery — writing paper.
  • stay loose — free or released from fastening or attachment: a loose end.
  • stay-press — (of fabric or clothing) treated so as to retain a freshly ironed look after washing.
  • stealingly — in a stealthy or elusive manner; by stealing
  • stealthily — done, characterized, or acting by stealth; furtive: stealthy footsteps.
  • steel gray — dark metallic gray with a bluish tinge.
  • stepfamily — a family composed of a parent, a stepparent, and a child or children by a previous marriage.
  • stercorary — a weatherproof place where dung is stored
  • stereotaxy — brain surgery that makes use of measurement in three dimensions for positioning an electrode, needle, etc. precisely
  • sterically — of or relating to the spatial relationships of atoms in a molecule.
  • stickybeak — a busybody; meddler.
  • store away — keep
  • strainedly — in a strained manner
  • strathspey — a slow Scottish dance in quadruple meter.
  • strawberry — the fruit of any stemless plant belonging to the genus Fragaria, of the rose family, consisting of an enlarged fleshy receptacle bearing achenes on its exterior.
  • strike pay — strike benefit.
  • stuyvesantPeter, 1592–1672, Dutch colonial administrator in the Americas: last governor of New Netherlands 1646–64.
  • subacutely — in a subacute manner
  • subvariety — a minor or subordinate variety
  • surreality — of, relating to, or characteristic of surrealism, an artistic and literary style; surrealistic.
  • suzerainty — the position or authority of a suzerain.
  • sylvestral — growing, living, or occurring in a wood or beneath a tree
  • symmetrian — an advocate of symmetry
  • sympathies — harmony of or agreement in feeling, as between persons or on the part of one person with respect to another.
  • sympathise — to be in sympathy or agreement of feeling; share in a feeling (often followed by with).
  • sympathize — to be in sympathy or agreement of feeling; share in a feeling (often followed by with).
  • syncopated — marked by syncopation: syncopated rhythm.
  • syndicated — a group of individuals or organizations combined or making a joint effort to undertake some specific duty or carry out specific transactions or negotiations: The local furniture store is individually owned, but is part of a buying syndicate.
  • synthetase — ligase.
  • systematic — having, showing, or involving a system, method, or plan: a systematic course of reading; systematic efforts.
  • tactlessly — lacking tact; showing no tact; undiplomatic; offendingly blunt: a tactless remark.
  • tearlessly — without shedding tears
  • tetrastyle — having four columns.
  • texas city — a city in SE Texas, on Galveston Bay.
  • tipsy cake — a kind of trifle made from a sponge cake soaked with white wine or sherry and decorated with almonds and crystallized fruit
  • tom sawyer — (The Adventures of Tom Sawyer)a novel (1876) by Mark Twain.
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