0%

7-letter words containing s, t, i, m

  • firmest — Superlative form of firm.
  • fomites — any agent, as clothing or bedding, that is capable of absorbing and transmitting the infecting organism of a disease.
  • gambist — a person who plays the viola da gamba
  • gambits — Plural form of gambit.
  • gimlets — Plural form of gimlet.
  • gnomist — a writer of aphorisms.
  • hermits — Plural form of hermit.
  • hymnist — a composer of hymns.
  • iambist — a person who writes iambs
  • imagist — (often initial capital letter) a theory or practice of a group of poets in England and America between 1909 and 1917 who believed that poetry should employ the language of common speech, create new rhythms, have complete freedom in subject matter, and present a clear, concentrated, and precise image.
  • impacts — Plural form of impact.
  • imparts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of impart.
  • impaste — to cover with or enclose in a paste.
  • impasto — the laying on of paint thickly.
  • impetus — a moving force; impulse; stimulus: The grant for building the opera house gave impetus to the city's cultural life.
  • imports — Plural form of import.
  • imposts — Plural form of impost.
  • imprest — impressment.
  • imputes — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of impute.
  • inmates — Plural form of inmate.
  • inmeats — (archaic) The edible viscera of animals, such as heart, liver, etc.
  • ismatic — following fashionable doctrines
  • isthmic — isthmian
  • isthmus — a narrow strip of land, bordered on both sides by water, connecting two larger bodies of land.
  • istominEugene, 1925–2003, U.S. concert pianist.
  • itacism — the pronunciation of the Greek letter eta as in Modern Greek
  • itemise — to state by items; give the particulars of; list the individual units or parts of: to itemize an account.
  • jimpest — Superlative form of jimp.
  • lamaist — One who believes in lamaism.
  • leftism — a member of the political Left or a person sympathetic to its views.
  • limites — plural of limes.
  • limpets — Plural form of limpet.
  • listeme — (linguistics) An item that is memorized as part of a list, as opposed to being generated by a rule.
  • maestri — Plural form of maestro.
  • maistre — Josephe de (ʒozɛf də). 1753–1821, French writer and diplomat, noted for his extreme reactionary views, expounded in such works as Les Soirées de St Petersbourg (1821)
  • maistry — (obsolete) mastery.
  • mantids — Plural form of mantid.
  • mappist — (archaic) cartographer.
  • marisat — one of a series of geostationary communications satellites that relay telecommunications between ships at sea and shore stations.
  • maritsa — a river in S Europe, flowing from S Bulgaria along the boundary between Greece and European Turkey and into the Aegean. 300 miles (485 km) long.
  • martins — Archer John Porter [ahr-cher] /ˈɑr tʃər/ (Show IPA), 1910–2002, English biochemist: Nobel Prize in chemistry 1952.
  • marxist — an adherent of Karl Marx or his theories.
  • mastiff — one of a breed of large, powerful, short-haired dogs having an apricot, fawn, or brindled coat.
  • masting — Nautical. a spar or structure rising above the hull and upper portions of a ship or boat to hold sails, spars, rigging, booms, signals, etc., at some point on the fore-and-aft line, as a foremast or mainmast. any of a number of individual spars composing such a structure, as a topmast supported on trestletrees at the head of a lower mast. any of various portions of a single spar that are beside particular sails, as a top-gallant mast and royal mast formed as a single spar.
  • mastoid — of or relating to the mastoid process.
  • mathiasRobert Bruce ("Bob") 1930–2006, U.S. track-and-field athlete.
  • matings — Plural form of mating, gerund of 'mate'.
  • matisse — Henri [ahn-ree] /ɑ̃ˈri/ (Show IPA), 1869–1954, French painter.
  • matsuri — A solemn festival celebrated periodically at Shinto shrines in Japan.
  • mattins — matin (def 1).
Was this page helpful?
Yes No
Thank you for your feedback! Tell your friends about this page
Tell us why?