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8-letter words containing t, a, r, e

  • routeway — a track, road, waterway, etc, used as a route to somewhere
  • rubygate — an Italian political scandal in which Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi was accused of paying for sex with a nightclub dancer and of abusing his office
  • ruckseat — a seat fixed to or forming part of a rucksack
  • ruminate — to chew the cud, as a ruminant.
  • runagate — a fugitive or runaway.
  • ruralite — of, relating to, or characteristic of the country, country life, or country people; rustic: rural tranquillity.
  • rustable — liable to rust
  • ruthenia — a former province in E Czechoslovakia.
  • sabatierPaul [pawl] /pɔl/ (Show IPA), 1854–1941, French chemist: Nobel prize 1912.
  • saboteur — a person who commits or practices sabotage.
  • sabotier — a wearer of sabots
  • sad tree — night jasmine (def 1).
  • santarem — a city in N Brazil, on the Amazon River.
  • santeria — (sometimes lowercase) a religion merging the worship of Yoruba deities with veneration of Roman Catholic saints: practiced in Cuba and spread to other parts of the Caribbean and to the U.S. by Cuban emigrés.
  • sarcenet — a fine, soft fabric, often of silk, made in plain or twill weave and used especially for linings.
  • sarraute — Nathalie [na-ta-lee] /na taˈli/ (Show IPA), (Nathalie Ilyanova Tcherniak) 1900–1999, French novelist, born in Russia.
  • sarsenet — a fine, soft fabric, often of silk, made in plain or twill weave and used especially for linings.
  • sather-k — (language)   Karlsruhe Sather. A sublanguage of Sather used for introductory courses in object-oriented design and typesafe programming. E-mail: <[email protected]>.
  • satirise — to attack or ridicule with satire.
  • satirize — to attack or ridicule with satire.
  • saturate — to cause (a substance) to unite with the greatest possible amount of another substance, through solution, chemical combination, or the like.
  • sauterne — a semisweet white wine of California, commonly sold as a jug wine.
  • scarcest — insufficient to satisfy the need or demand; not abundant: Meat and butter were scarce during the war.
  • scariest — causing fright or alarm.
  • scattery — characterized by scattering or dispersion
  • sceptral — of, resembling, or relating to a sceptre
  • scramjet — a ramjet engine in which the flow through the combustor itself is supersonic.
  • scrattle — to scratch
  • sea fret — a wet mist or haze coming inland from the sea
  • sea star — starfish.
  • sea-girt — surrounded by the sea.
  • seacraft — the skills and knowledge of a sailor
  • seafront — an area, including buildings, along the edge of the sea; waterfront.
  • seamster — a person whose occupation is sewing; tailor.
  • seatrain — a ship for the transportation of loaded railroad cars.
  • seatwork — work that can be done by a child at his or her seat in school without supervision.
  • seawater — the salt water in or from the sea.
  • sectator — a member or follower of a sect
  • sectoral — Geometry. a plane figure bounded by two radii and the included arc of a circle.
  • segreant — (of a griffin) rampant.
  • selictar — the sword-bearer of a chieftain
  • senorita — a Spanish term of address equivalent to miss, used alone or capitalized and prefixed to the name of a girl or unmarried woman. Abbreviation: Srta.
  • separate — to keep apart or divide, as by an intervening barrier or space: to separate two fields by a fence.
  • septaria — a concretionary nodule or mass, usually of calcium carbonate or of argillaceous carbonate of iron, traversed within by a network of cracks filled with calcite and other minerals.
  • serenata — a form of secular cantata, often of a dramatic or imaginative character.
  • serenate — a form of secular cantata, often of a dramatic or imaginative character.
  • sergeant — Ancient Eboracum. a city in North Yorkshire, in NE England, on the Ouse: the capital of Roman Britain; cathedral.
  • seriatim — in a series; one after another in regular order
  • sericate — sericeous; silky.
  • serjeant — a noncommissioned army officer of a rank above that of corporal.
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