7-letter words containing t, e, r
- brutely — in a brutish manner
- btrieve — 1. (company) BTRIEVE Technologies, Inc.. 2. (tool) A trademark of BTRIEVE Technologies, Inc. for their ISAM index file manager for IBM PCs.
- bumster — (of trousers) cut low so as to reveal the top part of the buttocks
- burette — a graduated glass tube with a stopcock on one end for dispensing and transferring known volumes of fluids, esp liquids
- burkite — burker; murderer
- burnett — Frances Hodgson (ˈhɒdʒsən). 1849–1924, US novelist, born in England; author of Little Lord Fauntleroy (1886) and The Secret Garden (1911)
- bursate — resembling or containing a bursa
- bursted — to break, break open, or fly apart with sudden violence: The bitter cold caused the pipes to burst.
- burster — a person or thing that bursts.
- burthen — burden1
- bustier — A bustier is a type of close-fitting strapless top worn by women.
- butcher — A butcher is a shopkeeper who cuts up and sells meat. Some butchers also kill animals for meat and make foods such as sausages and meat pies.
- butlery — a butler's room
- butters — very ugly
- buttery — Buttery food contains butter or is covered with butter.
- by rote — by repetition; by heart (often in the phrase learn by rote)
- c-store — convenience store.
- cabaret — Cabaret is live entertainment consisting of dancing, singing, or comedy acts that are performed in the evening in restaurants or nightclubs.
- calvert — Sir George, 1st Baron Baltimore. ?1580–1632, English statesman; founder of the colony of Maryland
- canters — Plural form of canter.
- cantred — a district comprising a hundred villages
- caprate — a salt of capric acid
- capture — If you capture someone or something, you catch them, especially in a war.
- carnate — Invested with, or embodied in, flesh.
- carnets — Plural form of carnet.
- carpets — Plural form of carpet.
- carreta — a simple two-wheeled oxcart.
- cartage — the process or cost of carting
- cartels — Plural form of cartel.
- carters — Plural form of carter.
- cartier — Jacques (ʒɑk). 1491–1557, French navigator and explorer in Canada, who discovered the St Lawrence River (1535)
- caserta — a town in S Italy, in Campania: centre of Garibaldi's campaigns for the unification of Italy (1860); Allied headquarters in World War II. Pop: 75 208 (2001)
- casters — Plural form of caster.
- castner — Hamilton Young. 1858–98, US chemist, who devised the Castner process for extracting sodium from sodium hydroxide
- catcher — In baseball, the catcher is the player who stands behind the batter. The catcher has a special glove for catching the ball.
- cateran — (formerly) a member of a band of brigands and marauders in the Scottish highlands
- catered — Simple past tense and past participle of cater.
- caterer — Caterers are people or companies that provide food and drink for a place such as an office or for special occasions such as weddings and parties.
- cattery — A cattery is a place where you can leave your cat to be looked after when you go on holiday.
- cattier — Comparative form of catty.
- cautery — the coagulation of blood or destruction of body tissue by cauterizing
- centare — centiare.
- centaur — In classical mythology, a centaur is a creature with the head, arms, and upper body of a man, and the body and legs of a horse.
- centers — Plural form of center.
- centner — a unit of weight equivalent to 100 pounds (45.3 kilograms)
- central — Something that is central is in the middle of a place or area.
- centred — If an industry or event is centred in a place, it takes place to the greatest extent there.
- centres — Geometry. the middle point, as the point within a circle or sphere equally distant from all points of the circumference or surface, or the point within a regular polygon equally distant from the vertices.
- centrex — a telephone system for businesses, large organizations, etc. in which outside calls can be made directly to, or from, any extension
- centri- — centro-