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7-letter words containing s, t, p

  • 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.
  • paylist — a list of people to be paid
  • 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.
  • pe-tsai — Chinese cabbage.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • 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.
  • pelotas — a city in S Brazil.
  • peltast — (in ancient Greece) a lightly armed foot soldier
  • pelters — strong criticism or verbal abuse
  • penates — the household gods of the ancient Romans
  • penster — a writer, esp of trivial things
  • pentose — a monosaccharide containing five atoms of carbon, as xylose, C 5 H 1 0 O 5 , or produced from pentosans by hydrolysis.
  • peritus — a Catholic theological expert and consultant who gives advice at an ecumenical council of the church
  • persalt — (in a series of salts of a given metal or group) the salt in which the metal or group has a high, or the highest apparent, valence.
  • persant — sharp or stabbing
  • persist — to continue steadfastly or firmly in some state, purpose, course of action, or the like, especially in spite of opposition, remonstrance, etc.: to persist in working for world peace; to persist in unpopular political activities.
  • pertest — boldly forward in speech or behavior; impertinent; saucy.
  • pertuse — punctured or perforated
  • pesante — in a forceful or weighty manner
  • peshito — the standard translation of the Old and New Testaments in ancient Syriac
  • petasos — a broad-brimmed hat worn by ancient Greek travelers and hunters, often represented in art as a winged hat worn by Hermes or Mercury.
  • petasus — a broad-brimmed hat worn by ancient Greek travelers and hunters, often represented in art as a winged hat worn by Hermes or Mercury.
  • petrous — denoting the dense part of the temporal bone that surrounds the inner ear
  • petscii — (character)   /pet'skee/ PET ASCII. The variation (many would say perversion) of the ASCII character set used by the Commodore Business Machines' PET series of personal computers and the later Commodore 64, Commodore 16, and Commodore 128 computers. The PETSCII set used left-arrow and up-arrow (as in old-style ASCII) instead of underscore and caret, placed the unshifted alphabet at positions 65--90, put the shifted alphabet at positions 193--218, and added graphic characters.
  • pettish — easily irritated, sulky
  • phobist — a person who suffers from an unusual fear or dread of something
  • photics — the science of light.
  • photism — a form of synesthesia in which a visual sensation, as of color or form, is produced by the sense of touch, hearing, etc.
  • photius — a.d. c820–891, patriarch of Constantinople 858–867, 877–882.
  • pianist — a person who plays the piano, especially one who performs expertly or professionally.
  • piarist — a member of a Roman Catholic teaching congregation founded in Rome in 1597.
  • piaster — a former coin of Turkey, the 100th part of a lira: replaced by the kurus in 1933.
  • piastre — a former coin of Turkey, the 100th part of a lira: replaced by the kurus in 1933.
  • pictish — the language of the Picts, apparently a Celtic language.
  • pieties — You refer to statements about what is morally right as pieties when you think they are insincere or unrealistic.
  • pietism — a movement, originating in the Lutheran Church in Germany in the 17th century, that stressed personal piety over religious formality and orthodoxy.
  • pietist — a movement, originating in the Lutheran Church in Germany in the 17th century, that stressed personal piety over religious formality and orthodoxy.
  • pilates — a system of physical conditioning involving low-impact exercises and stretches designed to strengthen muscles of the torso and often performed with specialized equipment.
  • pilatus — a mountain in central Switzerland, near Lucerne: a peak of the Alps; cable railway. 6998 feet (2130 meters).
  • pilotis — a column of iron, steel, or reinforced concrete supporting a building above an open ground level.
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