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7-letter words containing t, i

  • aviator — An aviator is a pilot of a plane, especially in the early days of flying.
  • avidity — the quality or state of being avid
  • aviette — an aeroplane driven solely by the strength of the aviator
  • awaited — to wait for; expect; look for: He is still awaiting an answer.
  • awaiter — a person who awaits something or someone
  • awright — (slang, informal) Okay; indication of approval. Variant colloquial form of \"all right\". Sometimes \"awight\" or \"ah'ight\".
  • axinite — a precious mineral, found in a range of colours, which forms glassy crystals
  • azimuth — the angular distance usually measured clockwise from the north point of the horizon to the intersection with the horizon of the vertical circle passing through a celestial body
  • azotise — Non-Oxford British standard spelling of azotize.
  • azotize — to nitrogenize
  • azurite — an azure-blue mineral associated with copper deposits. It is a source of copper. Composition: copper carbonate. Formula: Cu3(CO3)2(OH)2. Crystal structure: monoclinic
  • azymite — someone who uses unleavened bread to celebrate the Eucharist
  • babbitt — a narrow-minded and complacent member of the middle class
  • babinet — Jacques (ʒɑk) 1794–1872, French physicist, noted for his work on the diffraction of light
  • babysit — If you babysit for someone or babysit their children, you look after their children while they are out.
  • backbit — Simple past tense and past participle of backbite.
  • backfit — to retrofit, overhaul, esp an industrial plant
  • backlit — illuminated from behind
  • bactria — an ancient country of SW Asia, between the Hindu Kush mountains and the Oxus River: forms the present Balkh region in N Afghanistan
  • bailout — A bailout of an organization or individual that has financial problems is the act of helping them by giving them money.
  • bainite — a mixture of iron and iron carbide found in incompletely hardened steels, produced when austenite is transformed at temperatures between the pearlite and martensite ranges
  • baiters — Plural form of baiter.
  • baiting — food, or some substitute, used as a lure in fishing, trapping, etc.
  • bakhtin — ˌMikhaˈil (ˌmixɑˈil) ; mēˌkhäēlˈ) 1895-1975; Russ. literary critic & theoretician
  • balitac — Early system on IBM 650. Listed in CACM 2(5):16 (May 1959).
  • baltics — of, near, or on the Baltic Sea.
  • bandito — a Mexican bandit
  • bandits — Plural form of bandit.
  • banting — slimming by avoiding eating sugar, starch, and fat
  • bantoid — denoting or relating to languages, esp in Cameroon and Nigeria, that possess certain Bantu characteristics
  • baptise — to immerse in water or sprinkle or pour water on in the Christian rite of baptism: They baptized the new baby.
  • baptism — A baptism is a Christian ceremony in which a person is baptized. Compare christening.
  • baptist — A Baptist is a Christian who believes that people should not be baptized until they are old enough to understand the meaning of baptism.
  • baptize — When someone is baptized, water is put on their heads or they are covered with water as a sign that their sins have been forgiven and that they have become a member of the Christian Church. Compare christen.
  • bar pit — a roadside borrow pit dug for drainage purposes.
  • barefit — barefooted
  • barista — a person who makes and serves coffee in a coffee bar
  • bartica — a town in N Guyana, on the Essequibo River: river transportation center.
  • bartoli — Cecilia. born 1966, Italian mezzo-soprano, noted for her performances in Mozart and Rossini operas
  • bartsia — any of several species of semiparasitic scrophulariaceous plants, including red bartsia (Odontites verna), a pink-flowered weed of cornfields
  • basinet — a close-fitting medieval helmet of light steel usually with a visor
  • basmati — a variety of cultivated long-grain rice that is notably fragrant.
  • bassist — A bassist is someone who plays the bass guitar or the double bass.
  • bastian — Adolf [ah-dawlf] /ˈɑ dɔlf/ (Show IPA), 1826–1905, German anthropologist.
  • bastide — a large manor house in the south of France
  • basting — loose temporary stitches; tacking
  • bastion — If a system or organization is described as a bastion of a particular way of life, it is seen as being important and effective in defending that way of life. Bastion can be used both when you think that this way of life should be ended and when you think it should be defended.
  • bataisk — a city in the SW Russian Federation in Europe, S of Rostov, on the Don River.
  • batavia — an ancient district of the Netherlands, on an island at the mouth of the Rhine
  • batfish — any angler of the family Ogcocephalidae, having a flattened scaleless body and moving on the sea floor by means of fleshy pectoral and pelvic fins
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