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7-letter words containing t, e, s, l

  • resmelt — to smelt again
  • resplit — to split again
  • restful — giving or conducive to rest.
  • restyle — a particular kind, sort, or type, as with reference to form, appearance, or character: the baroque style; The style of the house was too austere for their liking.
  • results — good results; success
  • rustler — a cattle thief.
  • salient — prominent or conspicuous: salient traits.
  • saltate — to move by means of saltation
  • saltern — a saltworks.
  • saltier — tasting of or containing salt; saline.
  • saltine — a crisp, salted cracker.
  • saltire — an ordinary in the form of a cross with arms running diagonally from the dexter chief to the sinister base and from the sinister chief to the dexter base; St. Andrew's cross.
  • salvete — welcome!
  • satchelLeroy Robert ("Satchel") 1906–82, U.S. baseball player.
  • scantle — a small or scant amount
  • scarlet — a bright-red color inclining toward orange.
  • scheldt — a river in W Europe, flowing from N France through W Belgium and SW Netherlands into the North Sea. 270 miles (435 km) long.
  • scuttle — Nautical. a small hatch or port in the deck, side, or bottom of a vessel. a cover for this.
  • scytale — a tool used to transmit secret messages by way of wrapping a strip of leather around a cylinder and writing on it. The leather is then unwound and must be wrapped around a cylinder of the same size to read the message. Used by the Ancient Greeks, particularly the Spartans
  • sealant — a substance used for sealing, as sealing wax or adhesives.
  • sealift — a system for transporting persons or cargo by ship, especially in an emergency.
  • seattle — (Seatlh) c1790–1866, Suquamish leader: Seattle, Washington, named after him.
  • sectile — capable of being cut smoothly with a knife.
  • segetal — (of weeds) growing amongst crops
  • selecta — a disc jockey
  • selfist — a selfish person
  • sellout — an act or instance of selling out.
  • seltzer — (sometimes initial capital letter) a naturally effervescent mineral water containing common salt and small quantities of sodium, calcium, and magnesium carbonates.
  • servlet — a small program that runs on a web server, often accessing databases in response to client input
  • setline — any of various types of fishing line that consist of a long line suspended across a stream, between buoys, etc, and having shorter hooked and baited lines attached
  • settled — to appoint, fix, or resolve definitely and conclusively; agree upon (as time, price, or conditions).
  • settler — a person or thing that settles.
  • settlor — a person who makes a settlement of property.
  • setubalBay of, an inlet of the Atlantic, in W Portugal. 20 miles (32 km) long; 35 miles (56 km) wide.
  • sextile — Astronomy. noting or pertaining to the aspect or position of two heavenly bodies when 60° distant from each other.
  • sheitel — a wig worn by certain Orthodox Jewish married women in keeping with an old rabbinical precept that forbids a woman to leave her hair uncovered in the sight of a man other than her husband.
  • shelter — something beneath, behind, or within which a person, animal, or thing is protected from storms, missiles, adverse conditions, etc.; refuge.
  • sheltie — Shetland pony.
  • shelton — a city in SW Connecticut.
  • shottle — a small drawer in a chest for keeping money and small or special things
  • shuttle — a device in a loom for passing or shooting the weft thread through the shed from one side of the web to the other, usually consisting of a boat-shaped piece of wood containing a bobbin on which the weft thread is wound.
  • singlet — a sleeveless athletic jersey, especially a loose-fitting top worn by runners, joggers, etc.
  • sitella — any of various small generally black-and-white birds of the genus Neositta, having a straight sharp beak and strong claws used to run up trees in search of insects: family Sittidae (nuthatches)
  • sithole — Ndabaningi (əndabaˈnɪŋɡɪ). 1920–2000, Zimbabwean clergyman and politician; leader of the Zimbabwe African National Union (1963–74). He was one of the negotiators of the internal settlement (1978) to pave the way for Black majority rule in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe)
  • sitwellDame Edith, 1887–1964, English poet and critic.
  • skatole — a white, crystalline, watersoluble solid, C 9 H 9 N, having a strong, fecal odor: used chiefly as a fixative in the manufacture of perfume.
  • skelpit — slapped
  • skelter — to scurry.
  • skeltonJohn, c1460–1529, English poet.
  • skillet — a frying pan.
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