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7-letter words containing t, i, a

  • sematic — serving as a sign or warning of danger, as the conspicuous colors or markings of certain poisonous animals.
  • seriate — arranged or occurring in one or more series.
  • sestina — a poem of six six-line stanzas and a three-line envoy, originally without rhyme, in which each stanza repeats the end words of the lines of the first stanza, but in different order, the envoy using the six words again, three in the middle of the lines and three at the end.
  • setaria — any grass of the genus Setaria, having a dense panicle, grown for forage.
  • sextain — a stanza of six lines.
  • shaitan — Ash-Shaytān.
  • shantih — peace.
  • shastri — Lal Bahadur [lahl bah-hah-doo r] /lɑl bɑˈhɑ dʊər/ (Show IPA), 1904–66, Indian statesman: prime minister 1964–66.
  • sheitan — Ash-Shaytān.
  • shiatsu — a Japanese massage technique that includes the use of acupressure.
  • shiatzu — a Japanese massage technique that includes the use of acupressure.
  • shitcan — to dismiss from a job or position.
  • shittah — a tree, said to be an acacia, probably Acacia seyal, that yielded the shittim wood of the Old Testament.
  • shortia — an evergreen herb native to eastern North America and temperate Asia, with white, pink, or blue flowers
  • sialkot — a city in NE Pakistan: military station.
  • sigmate — having the form of the Greek sigma or the letter S.
  • simatic — an assemblage of rocks, rich in silica and magnesium, that constitutes the lower layer of the earth's crust and is found beneath the ocean floors and the sial of continents.
  • simitar — a curved, single-edged sword of Asian, especially Eastern origin.
  • sin tax — a tax levied on cigarettes, liquor, gambling, or other things considered neither luxuries nor necessities.
  • sinatraFrank (Francis Albert) 1915–98, U.S. singer and actor.
  • sinuate — bent in and out; winding; sinuous.
  • 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)
  • sitfast — a sore on a horse's back caused by rubbing of the saddle
  • sitsang — Tibet (def 1).
  • situate — to put in or on a particular site or place; locate.
  • skating — for skating
  • slainte — cheers!
  • slating — a fine-grained rock formed by the metamorphosis of clay, shale, etc., that tends to split along parallel cleavage planes, usually at an angle to the planes of stratification.
  • slatkin — Leonard. born 1944, US conductor; musical director of the St Louis Symphony Orchestra (1979–96) and of the National Symphony Orchestra (1996–2008)
  • slavist — a specialist in the study of Slavic languages, cultures, etc.
  • sliotar — the ball used in hurling
  • snaptin — a container for food
  • sociate — an associate or partner
  • solatia — something given in compensation for inconvenience, loss, injury, or the like; recompense.
  • somatic — of the body; bodily; physical.
  • somital — any of the longitudinal series of segments or parts into which the body of certain animals is divided; a metamere.
  • sosatie — a skewer of curried meat pieces
  • spastic — Pathology. pertaining to, of the nature of, or characterized by spasm, especially tonic spasm.
  • spathic — like spar.
  • spatial — of or relating to space.
  • spicate — having spikes, as a plant.
  • spinate — having thorns or a spine
  • spirant — fricative (def 2).
  • spraint — a piece of otter's dung
  • stabile — fixed in position; stable.
  • stadial — stade.
  • stadium — a sports arena, usually oval or horseshoe-shaped, with tiers of seats for spectators.
  • staggie — a little stag
  • staging — a single step or degree in a process; a particular phase, period, position, etc., in a process, development, or series.
  • stagira — an ancient town in NE Greece, in Macedonia on the E Chalcidice peninsula: birthplace of Aristotle.
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