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7-letter words containing t, e, r

  • in true — properly set, adjusted, aligned, etc.; exact
  • in-tern — to restrict to or confine within prescribed limits, as prisoners of war, enemy aliens, or combat troops who take refuge in a neutral country.
  • inciter — to stir, encourage, or urge on; stimulate or prompt to action: to incite a crowd to riot.
  • increst — (transitive) To adorn with a crest.
  • inditer — One who indites.
  • inearth — (transitive, chiefly poetic) To put into the earth; inter.
  • inertia — inertness, especially with regard to effort, motion, action, and the like; inactivity; sluggishness.
  • inertly — having no inherent power of action, motion, or resistance (opposed to active): inert matter.
  • ingrate — an ungrateful person.
  • inherit — to take or receive (property, a right, a title, etc.) by succession or will, as an heir: to inherit the family business.
  • inkster — a city in SE Michigan, near Detroit.
  • inserts — Plural form of insert.
  • instore — an establishment where merchandise is sold, usually on a retail basis.
  • int rev — Internal Revenue
  • intaker — One who or that which takes or draws in.
  • integer — Mathematics. one of the positive or negative numbers 1, 2, 3, etc., or zero. Compare whole number.
  • interac — a system of electronic bank payments or withdrawals
  • intered — Alternative spelling of interred.
  • interim — an intervening time; interval; meantime: School doesn't start till September, but he's taking a Spanish class in the interim.
  • interj. — interjection
  • interne — intern2 .
  • interns — Plural form of intern.
  • intoner — to utter with a particular tone or voice modulation.
  • intreat — (dated) entreat.
  • intrude — to thrust or bring in without invitation, permission, or welcome.
  • intruse — (botany) Pushed or projecting inward.
  • inverts — Plural form of invert.
  • inviter — to request the presence or participation of in a kindly, courteous, or complimentary way, especially to request to come or go to some place, gathering, entertainment, etc., or to do something: to invite friends to dinner.
  • ioduret — iodide
  • irately — angry; enraged: an irate customer.
  • irisate — to make iridescent
  • iterant — characterized by repetition; repeating.
  • iterate — to utter again or repeatedly.
  • iternet — (spelling)   It's spelled "Internet".
  • jarrettKeith, born 1945, U.S. jazz pianist and composer.
  • jaunter — Someone who jaunts.
  • jeritza — Maria [mah-ree-ah] /mɑˈri ɑ/ (Show IPA), 1887–1982, Austrian operatic soprano.
  • jesters — Plural form of jester.
  • jetport — an airport designed to handle commercial jet planes.
  • jittersjitters, nervousness; a feeling of fright or uneasiness (usually preceded by the): Every time I have to make a speech, I get the jitters.
  • jittery — extremely tense and nervous; jumpy: He's very jittery about the medical checkup.
  • jointer — the place at which two things, or separate parts of one thing, are joined or united, either rigidly or in such a way as to permit motion; juncture.
  • jotters — Plural form of jotter.
  • joubert — Joseph [zhaw-zef] /ʒɔˈzɛf/ (Show IPA), 1754–1824, French moralist and essayist.
  • jouster — A person who jousts.
  • jupiter — Also called Jove. the supreme deity of the ancient Romans: the god of the heavens and of weather. Compare Zeus.
  • justers — joust.
  • karaite — a member of a sect, founded in Persia in the 8th century a.d. by the religious leader Anan ben David, that rejected the Talmud and the teachings of the rabbis in favor of strict adherence to the Bible as the only source of Jewish law and practice.
  • kärnten — Carinthia
  • kastler — Alfred [al-fred] /alˈfrɛd/ (Show IPA), 1902–84, French physicist, born in Germany: Nobel Prize 1966.
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