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7-letter words containing t, e, z

  • metrize — to find a metric for (a topological space for which the metric topology is the given topology).
  • müntzer — Thomas. c. 1490–1525, German radical religious and political reformer; executed for organizing the Peasants' War (1524–25)
  • natchez — a port in SW Mississippi, on the Mississippi River.
  • netizen — (sometimes initial capital letter) a user of the Internet, often one who is actively engaged in uncensored online discussions of political and social issues: Chinese netizens who post their messages using pseudonyms.
  • neusatz — German name of Novi Sad.
  • outgaze — to gaze beyond or to surpass in seeing
  • outsize — an uncommon or irregular size, especially one larger than average.
  • ozonate — to add ozone to
  • pectize — to change into a jelly; gel
  • peptize — to disperse (a substance) into colloidal form, usually in a liquid.
  • plotzed — drunk; intoxicated.
  • poetize — to write poetry.
  • potenza — a city in Basilicata, in S Italy.
  • pretzel — a crisp, dry biscuit, usually in the form of a knot or stick, salted on the outside.
  • quetzal — any of several large Central and South American trogons of the genus Pharomachrus, having golden-green and scarlet plumage, especially P. mocino (resplendent quetzal) the national bird of Guatemala: rare and possibly endangered.
  • seltzer — (sometimes initial capital letter) a naturally effervescent mineral water containing common salt and small quantities of sodium, calcium, and magnesium carbonates.
  • shegetz — a term used especially by a Jew to refer to a boy or man who is not Jewish.
  • sizeist — discriminating on the basis of a person's size, esp against people considered to be overweight
  • spatzle — spaetzle.
  • staretz — (in the Russian Orthodox Church) a spiritual leader or holy man
  • stoozer — a person who stoozes
  • stylize — to design in or cause to conform to a particular style, as of representation or treatment in art; conventionalize.
  • switzer — Swiss (def 2).
  • szigetiJoseph, 1892–1973, U.S. violinist, born in Hungary.
  • tenzing — (Norgay) 1913?–86, Nepalese mountain climber who scaled Mt. Everest 1953.
  • trapeze — an apparatus, used in gymnastics and acrobatics, consisting of a short horizontal bar attached to the ends of two suspended ropes.
  • troezen — (in ancient geography) a town in E Peloponnesus near the coast of the Saronic Gulf, regarded in mythology as the birthplace of Theseus.
  • tweezer — tweezers.
  • twizzle — a spin or twist
  • tzekung — Zigong.
  • tzigane — (often lowercase) of, consisting of, or pertaining to Gypsies: Tzigane music.
  • tzimmes — Also, tsimmes. Jewish Cookery. any of various sweetened combinations of vegetables, fruit, and sometimes meat, prepared as a casserole or stew.
  • unitize — to form or combine into one unit, as by welding parts together: a car with a unitized body.
  • utilize — to put to use; turn to profitable account: to utilize a stream to power a mill.
  • vt fuze — a variable time fuze.
  • waltzed — Simple past tense and past participle of waltz.
  • waltzer — a ballroom dance, in moderately fast triple meter, in which the dancers revolve in perpetual circles, taking one step to each beat.
  • waltzes — Plural form of waltz.
  • yangtze — Older Spelling. Chang Jiang.
  • zabtieh — a Turkish police officer
  • zaitech — an investment in financial markets by a company to supplement its main income
  • zaniest — ludicrously or whimsically comical; clownish.
  • zapateo — a Cuban dance in three-quarter time emphasizing staccato stamping footwork.
  • zapotec — a member of an American Indian people living in the Mexican state of Oaxaca.
  • zatlers — Valdis. born 1955, Latvian politician, president of Latvia (2007–2011)
  • zatopek — Emil [e-mil] /ˈɛ mɪl/ (Show IPA), 1922–2000, Czech long-distance runner.
  • zealant — (archaic) A zealot.
  • zealots — Plural form of zealot.
  • zeerust — Datedness of something originally intended to seem futuristic.
  • zemstvo — one of a system of elected local assemblies established in 1864 by Alexander II to replace the authority of the nobles in administering local affairs after the abolition of serfdom: became the core of the liberal movement from 1905 to 1917.
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