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7-letter words containing t, a, e

  • blatted — drunk
  • blatter — a prattle
  • bleated — to utter the cry of a sheep, goat, or calf or a sound resembling such a cry.
  • bleaunt — a short tunic or blouse, worn in the Middle Ages.
  • bloated — If someone's body or a part of their body is bloated, it is much larger than normal, usually because it has a lot of liquid or gas inside it.
  • bloater — a herring, or sometimes a mackerel, that has been salted in brine, smoked, and cured
  • boasted — to speak with exaggeration and excessive pride, especially about oneself.
  • boaster — a chisel for boasting stone.
  • boatage — the act of hauling by boat.
  • boeotia — a region of ancient Greece, northwest of Athens. It consisted of ten city-states, which formed the Boeotian League, led by Thebes: at its height in the 4th century bc
  • bottega — a workshop or studio, particularly that part used by a master artist's assistants or pupils
  • boutade — an outburst; sally
  • bracket — If you say that someone or something is in a particular bracket, you mean that they come within a particular range, for example a range of incomes, ages, or prices.
  • brantle — a French dance
  • brattle — a rattling or clattering sound
  • bravest — possessing or exhibiting courage or courageous endurance.
  • breadth — The breadth of something is the distance between its two sides.
  • breathe — When people or animals breathe, they take air into their lungs and let it out again. When they breathe smoke or a particular kind of air, they take it into their lungs and let it out again as they breathe.
  • breaths — the air inhaled and exhaled in respiration.
  • breathy — If someone has a breathy voice, you can hear their breath when they speak or sing.
  • bromate — any salt or ester of bromic acid, containing the monovalent group -BrO3 or ion BrO3–
  • bullate — puckered or blistered in appearance
  • bursate — resembling or containing a bursa
  • cabaret — Cabaret is live entertainment consisting of dancing, singing, or comedy acts that are performed in the evening in restaurants or nightclubs.
  • cabinet — A cabinet is a cupboard used for storing things such as medicine or alcoholic drinks or for displaying decorative things in.
  • cablets — Plural form of cablet.
  • cachets — Plural form of cachet.
  • cacolet — a seat or bed fitted to a mule for carrying the sick or wounded
  • cadette — a member of the division of the Girl Scouts for girls twelve to fourteen years of age
  • caetano — Marcello (marˈselu). 1906–80, prime minister of Portugal from 1968 until he was replaced by an army coup in 1974
  • cainite — a member of a Gnostic sect that exalted Cain and regarded the God of the Old Testament as responsible for evil.
  • caitive — a captive
  • cajeput — cajuput
  • calcite — a colourless or white mineral (occasionally tinged with impurities), found in sedimentary and metamorphic rocks, in veins, in limestone, and in stalagmites and stalactites. It is used in the manufacture of cement, plaster, paint, glass, and fertilizer. Composition: calcium carbonate. Formula: CaCO3. Crystal structure: hexagonal (rhombohedral)
  • callest — Archaic second-person singular form of call.
  • calmest — without rough motion; still or nearly still: a calm sea.
  • calmeth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of calm.
  • calotte — a skullcap worn by Roman Catholic clergy
  • caltech — the California Institute of Technology
  • calumet — a long-stemmed ceremonial pipe, smoked by North American Indians as a token of peace, at sacrifices, etc.
  • calvert — Sir George, 1st Baron Baltimore. ?1580–1632, English statesman; founder of the colony of Maryland
  • cambelt — Part of an internal combustion engine that synchronizes the rotation of the crankshaft and the camshaft(s) so that the engine's valves open and close at the proper times during each cylinder's intake and exhaust strokes.
  • camelot — (in Arthurian legend) the English town where King Arthur's palace and court were situated
  • campest — something that provides sophisticated, knowing amusement, as by virtue of its being artlessly mannered or stylized, self-consciously artificial and extravagant, or teasingly ingenuous and sentimental.
  • candent — glowing with heat
  • cane it — to do something with great power, force, or speed or consume something such as alcohol in large quantities
  • canetti — Elias. 1905–94, British novelist and writer, born in Bulgaria, who usually wrote in German. His works include the novel Auto da Fé (1935). Nobel prize for literature 1981
  • cantate — the 98th psalm sung as a non-metrical hymn
  • canteen — A canteen is a place in a factory, shop, or college where meals are served to the people who work or study there.
  • canters — Plural form of canter.
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