7-letter words containing t, e, r
- exciter — A thing that produces excitation, in particular a device that provides a magnetizing current for the electromagnets in a motor or generator.
- excitor — a nerve that, when stimulated, causes increased activity in the organ or part it supplies
- excreta — Waste matter discharged from the body, especially feces and urine.
- excrete — (of a living organism or cell) separate and expel as waste (a substance, especially a product of metabolism).
- exerted — Simple past tense and past participle of exert.
- exetera — Eye dialect of et cetera.
- exhorts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of exhort.
- experts — Plural form of expert.
- exports — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of export.
- exserts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of exsert.
- extorts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of extort.
- extract — Remove or take out, especially by effort or force.
- extrait — an extract, esp in perfumery
- extream — Archaic spelling of extreme.
- extreat — an extraction
- extrema — Plural form of extremum.
- extreme — Reaching a high or the highest degree; very great.
- extropy — The pseudoscientific principle that life will expand indefinitely and in an orderly, progressive way throughout the entire universe by the means of human intelligence and technology.
- extrude — Thrust or force out.
- facture — the act, process, or manner of making anything; construction.
- fainter — lacking brightness, vividness, clearness, loudness, strength, etc.: a faint light; a faint color; a faint sound.
- fairest — free from bias, dishonesty, or injustice: a fair decision; a fair judge.
- falster — an island in SE Denmark. 198 sq. mi. (513 sq. km).
- falters — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of falter.
- farrest — farthest.
- farther — at or to a great distance; a long way off; at or to a remote point: We sailed far ahead of the fleet.
- fartlek — a training technique, used especially among runners, consisting of bursts of intense effort loosely alternating with less strenuous activity.
- fathers — Plural form of father.
- fatware — (computing, informal) Bloatware.
- faulter — (obsolete) One who commits a fault.
- feaster — any rich or abundant meal: The steak dinner was a feast.
- feather — one of the horny structures forming the principal covering of birds, consisting typically of a hard, tubular portion attached to the body and tapering into a thinner, stemlike portion bearing a series of slender, barbed processes that interlock to form a flat structure on each side.
- feature — a prominent or conspicuous part or characteristic: Tall buildings were a new feature on the skyline.
- felwort — (botany) A European herb, Swertia perennis, of the gentian family.
- fenster — an erosional break in an overthrust rock sheet, exposing the rocks that underlie the sheet.
- fermata — the sustaining of a note, chord, or rest for a duration longer than the indicated time value, with the length of the extension at the performer's discretion.
- fermate — the sustaining of a note, chord, or rest for a duration longer than the indicated time value, with the length of the extension at the performer's discretion.
- ferment — Also called organized ferment. any of a group of living organisms, as yeasts, molds, and certain bacteria, that cause fermentation.
- ferrate — a salt of the hypothetical ferric acid, H 2 FeO 4 .
- ferrets — Plural form of ferret.
- ferrety — a domesticated, usually red-eyed, and albinic variety of the polecat, used in Europe for driving rabbits and rats from their burrows.
- ferrite — Chemistry. a compound, as NaFeO 2 , formed when ferric oxide is combined with a more basic metallic oxide.
- fertile — bearing, producing, or capable of producing vegetation, crops, etc., abundantly; prolific: fertile soil.
- fervent — having or showing great warmth or intensity of spirit, feeling, enthusiasm, etc.; ardent: a fervent admirer; a fervent plea.
- festers — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of fester.
- fetcher — to go and bring back; return with; get: to go up a hill to fetch a pail of water.
- fetters — Plural form of fetter.
- fettler — A person who maintains railway lines.
- fibrate — any of a class of drugs used to lower fat levels in the body
- fibster — a small or trivial lie; minor falsehood.