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7-letter words containing t, a, m, p

  • palmiet — a South African rush
  • palmtop — a battery-powered computer small enough to fit in the palm of the hand.
  • pantoum — a Malay verse form consisting of an indefinite number of quatrains with the second and fourth lines of each quatrain repeated as the first and third lines of the following one.
  • pastime — something that serves to make time pass agreeably; a pleasant means of amusement, recreation, or sport: to play cards as a pastime.
  • patmore — Coventry (Kersey Dighton) [kov-uh n-tree kur-zee dahyt-n,, duhv-uh n‐] /ˈkɒv ən tri ˈkɜr zi ˈdaɪt n,, ˈdʌv ən‐/ (Show IPA), 1823–96, English poet and essayist.
  • payment — something that is paid; an amount paid; compensation; recompense.
  • peatman — a person who sells peat
  • peteman — peterman.
  • phantom — an apparition or specter.
  • plumate — resembling a feather, as a hair or bristle that bears smaller hairs.
  • pomatum — pomade.
  • portman — a group of citizens of a town responsible for administering the affairs of that town
  • postman — a postal employee who carries and delivers mail; mail carrier.
  • potamic — of or relating to rivers.
  • potomac — a river flowing SE from the Allegheny Mountains in West Virginia, along the boundary between Maryland and Virginia to the Chesapeake Bay. 287 miles (460 km) long.
  • potsdam — a state in NE central Germany. 10,039 sq. mi. (26,000 sq. km). Capital: Potsdam.
  • primate — Ecclesiastical. an archbishop or bishop ranking first among the bishops of a province or country.
  • ptarmic — a material that causes sneezing
  • pteroma — pteron.
  • putamen — Botany. a hard or stony endocarp, as a peach stone.
  • puttnam — David, Baron. born 1941, British film producer. Films include Chariots of Fire (1981), The Killing Fields (1984), Memphis Belle (1990), and My Life So Far (1999)
  • rampant — violent in action or spirit; raging; furious: a rampant leopard.
  • rampart — Fortification. a broad elevation or mound of earth raised as a fortification around a place and usually capped with a stone or earth parapet. such an elevation together with the parapet.
  • restamp — to strike or beat with a forcible, downward thrust of the foot.
  • spambot — a bot that searches the Internet for email addresses in order to send spam.
  • stamped — A stamped envelope or package has a stamp stuck on it.
  • stamper — a person or thing that stamps.
  • t&a — entertainment, as TV programs or movies, that is characterized by the deliberately titillating display of the female form
  • tampala — a branching tropical plant, Amaranthus tricolor, of the amaranth family, cultivated in Asia as a green vegetable.
  • tampere — a city in SW Finland.
  • tampico — a seaport in SE Tamaulipas, in E Mexico.
  • tamping — to force in or down by repeated, rather light, strokes: He tamped the tobacco in his pipe.
  • tampion — a plug or stopper placed in the muzzle of a piece of ordnance when not in use, to keep out dampness and dust.
  • tapeman — a person who holds and positions a tape in taking measurements.
  • tapetum — Botany. a layer of cells often investing the archespore in a developing sporangium and absorbed as the spores mature.
  • taproom — a barroom, especially in an inn or hotel; bar.
  • tapsman — a barman
  • team up — a number of persons forming one of the sides in a game or contest: a football team.
  • tempera — a technique of painting in which an emulsion consisting of water and pure egg yolk or a mixture of egg and oil is used as a binder or medium, characterized by its lean film-forming properties and rapid drying rate.
  • templar — a member of a religious military order founded by Crusaders in Jerusalem about 1118, and suppressed in 1312.
  • tempura — seafood or vegetables dipped in batter and deep-fried.
  • timpana — a traditional Maltese baked pasta and pastry dish
  • timpani — a set of kettledrums, especially as used in an orchestra or band.
  • timpano — a kettledrum
  • topmast — the mast next above a lower mast, usually formed as a separate spar from the lower mast and used to support the yards or rigging of a topsail or topsails.
  • topmaul — a heavy hammer with a steel or wooden head, used in shipbuilding.
  • topsman — a chief drover of herding cattle
  • tramped — to tread or walk with a firm, heavy, resounding step.
  • tramper — to tread or walk with a firm, heavy, resounding step.
  • trample — to tread or step heavily and noisily; stamp.
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