7-letter words containing t, e, u
- justice — Donald, 1925–2004, U.S. poet.
- justine — a female given name: derived from Justin.
- kentuck — Kentucky.
- ketchup — a condiment consisting of puréed tomatoes, onions, vinegar, sugar, spices, etc.
- ketubah — the formal contract in a Jewish religious marriage that includes specific financial protection for the wife in the event that the husband dies or divorces her.
- keturah — the second wife of Abraham. Gen. 25:1.
- ketuvim — the Hagiographa.
- kitsune — (mythology) a Japanese fox spirit, normally female, said to have powers such as shape-shifting, and whose power is symbolized by increase in number of tails.
- klutzes — Plural form of klutz.
- knouted — Simple past tense and past participle of knout.
- kuletuk — a hip-length overcoat with a hood, usually designed for women; parka.
- kunzite — a transparent lilac-colored variety of spodumene, used as a gem.
- kutenai — a river flowing from SW Canada through NW Montana and N Idaho, swinging back into Canada to the Columbia River. 400 miles (645 km) long.
- kutenay — a member of a North American Indian people of British Columbia, Montana, and Idaho.
- kuznets — Simon (Smith) 1901–85, U.S. economist, born in Russia: Nobel Prize 1971.
- lachute — a city in S Quebec, in E Canada.
- languet — any of various small tongue-shaped parts, processes, or projections.
- laurate — a salt or ester of lauric acid.
- lautrec — Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri.
- lecture — a speech read or delivered before an audience or class, especially for instruction or to set forth some subject: a lecture on Picasso's paintings.
- lecturn — Misspelling of lectern.
- lentous — viscid or viscous
- let out — (of fur) processed by cutting parallel diagonal slashes into the pelt and sewing the slashed edges together to lengthen the pelt and to improve the appearance of the fur.
- let-out — (of fur) processed by cutting parallel diagonal slashes into the pelt and sewing the slashed edges together to lengthen the pelt and to improve the appearance of the fur.
- lettuce — a cultivated plant, Lactuca sativa, occurring in many varieties and having succulent leaves used for salads.
- leucite — a whitish or grayish mineral, potassium aluminum silicate, KAlSi 2 O 6 , found in alkali volcanic rocks.
- leuctra — a town in ancient Greece, in Boeotia: Thebans defeated Spartans here 371 b.c.
- lietuva — Lithuanian name of Lithuania.
- linecut — an engraving or print obtained from a line drawing
- lineout — (rugby) a set piece where the hooker throws the ball into play between a row of players from each team.
- liquate — to heat (an alloy or mixture) sufficiently to melt the more fusible matter and thus to separate it from the rest, as in the refining of tin.
- lotuses — Plural form of lotus.
- loudest — Superlative form of loud.
- luddite — a member of any of various bands of workers in England (1811–16) organized to destroy manufacturing machinery, under the belief that its use diminished employment.
- lunated — Lunate; crescent-shaped.
- lunates — Plural form of lunate.
- lunette — any of various objects or spaces of crescentlike or semicircular outline or section.
- lunulet — (zoology) A small spot, shaped like a half-moon or crescent.
- lusters — Plural form of luster.
- lusteth — (archaic) Third-person singular simple present indicative form of lust.
- lustier — Comparative form of lusty.
- lustred — Having a lustre.
- lustres — Plural form of lustre.
- luteous — (of yellow) having a light to medium greenish tinge.
- lutetia — Paris2
- luthern — a dormer window.
- luthier — a maker of stringed instruments, as violins.
- lutyens — Sir Edwin Landseer, 1869–1944, English architect.
- luxated — Simple past tense and past participle of luxate.
- lyautey — Louis Hubert Gonzalve [lwee y-ber gawn-zalv] /lwi üˈbɛr gɔ̃ˈzalv/ (Show IPA), 1854–1934, French marshal: resident general of Morocco 1912–16, 1917–25.