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7-letter words containing t, e, r

  • penster — a writer, esp of trivial things
  • percent — Also called per centum. one one-hundredth part; 1/100.
  • percept — the mental result or product of perceiving, as distinguished from the act of perceiving; an impression or sensation of something perceived.
  • perchta — the goddess of death and of fertility: sometimes identified with Holle.
  • percoct — well-cooked; overcooked
  • perfect — conforming absolutely to the description or definition of an ideal type: a perfect sphere; a perfect gentleman.
  • periapt — an amulet.
  • peridot — a green transparent variety of olivine, used as a gem.
  • peritus — a Catholic theological expert and consultant who gives advice at an ecumenical council of the church
  • perlite — a volcanic glass in which concentric fractures impart a distinctive structure resembling masses of small spheroids, used as a plant growth medium.
  • permute — to alter; change.
  • perpent — perpend1 .
  • persalt — (in a series of salts of a given metal or group) the salt in which the metal or group has a high, or the highest apparent, valence.
  • persant — sharp or stabbing
  • persist — to continue steadfastly or firmly in some state, purpose, course of action, or the like, especially in spite of opposition, remonstrance, etc.: to persist in working for world peace; to persist in unpopular political activities.
  • pertain — to have reference or relation; relate: documents pertaining to the lawsuit.
  • pertest — boldly forward in speech or behavior; impertinent; saucy.
  • perturb — to disturb or disquiet greatly in mind; agitate.
  • pertuse — punctured or perforated
  • pervert — to affect with perversion.
  • peter i — ("the Great") 1672–1725, czar of Russia 1682–1725.
  • petered — to diminish gradually and stop; dwindle to nothing: The hot water always peters out in the middle of my shower.
  • petitor — a seeker; an applicant or candidate.
  • petrale — a variety of flounder, native to the Pacific coast of North America and commonly caught for food
  • petrary — a weapon used to propel stones
  • petrify — to convert into stone or a stony substance.
  • petrine — of or relating to the apostle Peter or the Epistles bearing his name.
  • petrog. — petrography
  • petrous — denoting the dense part of the temporal bone that surrounds the inner ear
  • peytrel — the part of a horse's harness or the protective part that shields its chest
  • philter — a potion, charm, or drug supposed to cause the person taking it to fall in love, usually with some specific person.
  • philtre — philter.
  • phorate — a systemic insecticide, C 7 H 1 7 O 2 PS 3 , used especially as a soil treatment for the control of numerous crop-damaging insects.
  • piaster — a former coin of Turkey, the 100th part of a lira: replaced by the kurus in 1933.
  • piastre — a former coin of Turkey, the 100th part of a lira: replaced by the kurus in 1933.
  • picrate — a salt or ester of picric acid.
  • picrite — a granular igneous rock composed chiefly of olivine and augite, but containing small amounts of feldspar.
  • picture — a visual representation of a person, object, or scene, as a painting, drawing, photograph, etc.: I carry a picture of my grandchild in my wallet.
  • piefort — piedfort.
  • pierrot — a male character in certain French pantomime, having a whitened face and wearing a loose, white, fancy costume.
  • pinxter — Whitsuntide.
  • pirated — a person who robs or commits illegal violence at sea or on the shores of the sea.
  • pitcherMolly (Mary Ludwig Hays McCauley) 1754–1832, American Revolutionary heroine.
  • pivoter — someone who pivots
  • plaiter — a person who plaits something such as wool, hair, or threads
  • planter — a person who plants.
  • plaster — a composition, as of lime or gypsum, sand, water, and sometimes hair or other fiber, applied in a pasty form to walls, ceilings, etc., and allowed to harden and dry.
  • platter — a large, shallow dish, usually elliptical in shape, for holding and serving food, especially meat or fish.
  • pleater — a fold of definite, even width made by doubling cloth or the like upon itself and pressing or stitching it in place.
  • plectra — plectrum.
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