7-letter words containing t, e, m, p
- metopon — An opiate analogue, a methylated derivative of hydromorphone used as an analgesic.
- midstep — During a step.
- mispelt — Misspelling of misspelt.
- misstep — a wrong step.
- mistype — a number of things or persons sharing a particular characteristic, or set of characteristics, that causes them to be regarded as a group, more or less precisely defined or designated; class; category: a criminal of the most vicious type.
- mixtape — a recording on a cassette tape, CD, or digital medium, consisting of music or songs selected by a single person: My boyfriend made me the greatest mixtape for my birthday.
- moppets — Plural form of moppet.
- morpeth — a town in NE England, the administrative centre of Northumberland. Pop: 13 555 (2001)
- muppets — Plural form of muppet.
- naptime — a time set aside for taking a nap; a period during which one naps.
- np time — nondeterministic polynomial time
- nymphet — a young nymph.
- paestum — an ancient coastal city of Lucania, in S Italy: the extant ruins include three Greek temples and a Roman amphitheater.
- palmate — shaped like an open palm or like a hand with the fingers extended, as a leaf or an antler.
- palmiet — a South African rush
- 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
- pentium — (processor) Intel's superscalar successor to the 486. It has two 32-bit 486-type integer pipelines with dependency checking. It can execute a maximum of two instructions per cycle. It does pipelined floating-point and performs branch prediction. It has 16 kilobytes of on-chip cache, a 64-bit memory interface, 8 32-bit general-purpose registers and 8 80-bit floating-point registers. It is built from 3.1 million transistors on a 262.4 mm^2 die with ~2.3 million transistors in the core logic. Its clock rate is 66MHz, heat dissipation is 16W, integer performance is 64.5 SPECint92, floating-point performance 56.9 SPECfp92. It is called "Pentium" because it is the fifth in the 80x86 line. It would have been called the 80586 had a US court not ruled that you can't trademark a number. The successors are the Pentium Pro and Pentium II. The following Pentium variants all belong to "x86 Family 6", as reported by "Microsoft Windows" when identifying the CPU: Model Name 1 Pentium Pro 2 ? 3 Pentium II 4 ? 5, 6 Celeron or Pentium II 7 Pentium III 8 Celeron uPGA2 or Mobile Pentium III A floating-point division bug was discovered in October 1994.
- permute — to alter; change.
- peteman — peterman.
- pietism — a movement, originating in the Lutheran Church in Germany in the 17th century, that stressed personal piety over religious formality and orthodoxy.
- pigment — a dry insoluble substance, usually pulverized, which when suspended in a liquid vehicle becomes a paint, ink, etc.
- pimento — pimiento.
- pinetum — an arboretum of pines and coniferous trees.
- plumate — resembling a feather, as a hair or bristle that bears smaller hairs.
- plummet — Also called plumb bob. a piece of lead or some other weight attached to a line, used for determining perpendicularity, for sounding, etc.; the bob of a plumb line.
- pomfret — any of several scombroid fishes of the family Bramidae, found in the North Atlantic and Pacific.
- preempt — to occupy (land) in order to establish a prior right to buy.
- premeet — happening before a meet
- preterm — occurring earlier in pregnancy than expected; premature: preterm labor.
- pretrim — to trim in advance
- primate — Ecclesiastical. an archbishop or bishop ranking first among the bishops of a province or country.
- primest — of the first importance; demanding the fullest consideration: a prime requisite.
- pro tem — temporarily; for the time being.
- promote — to help or encourage to exist or flourish; further: to promote world peace.
- pteroma — pteron.
- ptolemy — (Claudius Ptolemaeus) flourished a.d. 127–151, Hellenistic mathematician, astronomer, and geographer in Alexandria.
- putamen — Botany. a hard or stony endocarp, as a peach stone.
- restamp — to strike or beat with a forcible, downward thrust of the foot.
- restump — to provide (a building) with new stumps
- ruptime — Unix Berkeley networking command to report the status of all hosts on the net. See also rwho. See ruptime(1N).
- septime — the seventh of eight defensive positions.
- stamped — A stamped envelope or package has a stamp stuck on it.
- stamper — a person or thing that stamps.
- stempel — a timber support or crossbar, often used as a step in mines
- stemple — a timber support or crossbar, often used as a step in mines
- stomper — stamp (defs 1–3).
- stompie — a cigarette butt