7-letter words containing s, t, e, l
- skittle — skittles, (used with a singular verb) ninepins in which a wooden ball or disk is used to knock down the pins.
- slainte — cheers!
- slanter — to veer or angle away from a given level or line, especially from a horizontal; slope.
- slather — to spread or apply thickly: to slather butter on toast.
- slatted — a slap; a sharp blow.
- slatter — to be slovenly in dress
- sleekit — sleeky.
- sleeted — precipitation in the form of ice pellets created by the freezing of rain as it falls (distinguished from hail2. ).
- sleight — skill; dexterity.
- slinter — a dodge, trick, or stratagem
- slither — to slide down or along a surface, especially unsteadily, from side to side, or with some friction or noise: The box slithered down the chute.
- slotted — a narrow, elongated depression, groove, notch, slit, or aperture, especially a narrow opening for receiving or admitting something, as a coin or a letter.
- slotter — a person or thing that slots.
- slowest — moving or proceeding with little or less than usual speed or velocity: a slow train.
- smelter — a person or thing that smelts.
- smittle — (of a disease) infectious
- sniglet — any word coined for something that has no specific name.
- solated — to change from a gel to a sol.
- solutes — the substance dissolved in a given solution.
- solvate — a compound formed by the interaction of a solvent and a solute.
- solvent — able to pay all just debts.
- spatule — a spatula
- spatzle — spaetzle.
- spelter — zinc, especially in the form of ingots.
- spilite — a type of igneous rock
- spittle — saliva; spit.
- spoleto — a city in Perugia, Italy
- spurtle — a stick used to stir porridge.
- stabile — fixed in position; stable.
- stabler — a person who runs a horse stable.
- staddle — the lower part of a stack of hay or the like.
- stalked — having a stalk or stem.
- stalker — a person who pursues game, prey, or a person stealthily.
- stalled — a pretext, as a ruse, trick, or the like, used to delay or deceive.
- stammel — a coarse woollen cloth in former use for undergarments, etc, and usually dyed red
- staniel — a kestrel
- stanley — Arthur Penrhyn [pen-rin] /ˈpɛn rɪn/ (Show IPA), (Dean Stanley) 1815–81, English clergyman and author.
- stapler — a person who staples wool.
- starlet — a young actress promoted and publicized as a future star, especially in motion pictures.
- startle — to disturb or agitate suddenly as by surprise or alarm.
- stately — majestic; imposing in magnificence, elegance, etc.: a stately home.
- statler — Ellsworth Milton, 1863–1928, U.S. hotel-chain developer.
- stealer — to take (the property of another or others) without permission or right, especially secretly or by force: A pickpocket stole his watch.
- stealth — secret, clandestine, or surreptitious procedure.
- steeled — any of various modified forms of iron, artificially produced, having a carbon content less than that of pig iron and more than that of wrought iron, and having qualities of hardness, elasticity, and strength varying according to composition and heat treatment: generally categorized as having a high, medium, or low-carbon content.
- steeler — any of various modified forms of iron, artificially produced, having a carbon content less than that of pig iron and more than that of wrought iron, and having qualities of hardness, elasticity, and strength varying according to composition and heat treatment: generally categorized as having a high, medium, or low-carbon content.
- steelie — steelhead.
- steeple — an ornamental construction, usually ending in a spire, erected on a roof or tower of a church, public building, etc.
- steeply — having an almost vertical slope or pitch, or a relatively high gradient, as a hill, an ascent, stairs, etc.
- stelene — related to or resembling a stela or upright commemorative stone slab; columnar