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7-letter words containing t, o, u, r

  • retouch — to improve with new touches, highlights, or the like; touch up or rework, as a painting or makeup.
  • rideout — to sit on and manage a horse or other animal in motion; be carried on the back of an animal.
  • rig out — Chiefly Nautical. to put in proper order for working or use. to fit (a ship, mast, etc.) with the necessary shrouds, stays, etc. to fit (shrouds, stays, sails, etc.) to the mast, yard, or the like.
  • riotous — (of an act) characterized by or of the nature of rioting or a disturbance of the peace.
  • robusta — a coffee tree, Coffea canephora, native to western tropical Africa and cultivated in warm regions of the Old World.
  • rollout — the first public showing of an aircraft.
  • romaunt — a romantic tale or poem; romance.
  • root up — a part of the body of a plant that develops, typically, from the radicle and grows downward into the soil, anchoring the plant and absorbing nutriment and moisture.
  • rostrum — any platform, stage, or the like, for public speaking.
  • rotorua — a city on N central North Island, in New Zealand.
  • rotunda — a round building, especially one with a dome.
  • rouaultGeorges [zhawrzh] /ʒɔrʒ/ (Show IPA), 1871–1958, French painter.
  • rousant — rising
  • rouster — roustabout (def 1).
  • rout up — to find or get by turning up or poking about
  • routhie — abundant, plentiful, or well filled
  • routine — subroutine
  • routing — a bellow.
  • rub out — to subject the surface of (a thing or person) to pressure and friction, as in cleaning, smoothing, polishing, coating, massaging, or soothing: to rub a table top with wax polish; to rub the entire back area.
  • ruction — a disturbance, quarrel, or row.
  • run out — an act or instance, or a period of running: a five-minute run before breakfast.
  • run-out — the act of evading a jump or jumping outside of the limiting markers.
  • rustout — rust-through.
  • sautoir — a ribbon, chain, scarf, or the like, tied around the neck in such a manner that the ends cross over each other.
  • scouter — a person who scouts.
  • scrotum — the pouch of skin that contains the testes.
  • souther — a wind or storm from the south.
  • soutter — a person who makes or repairs shoes; cobbler; shoemaker.
  • spouter — to emit or discharge forcibly (a liquid, granulated substance, etc.) in a stream or jet.
  • sprouts — newly grown shoots or buds
  • stouter — bulky in figure; heavily built; corpulent; thickset; fat: She is getting too stout for her dresses. Synonyms: big, rotund, stocky, portly, fleshy. Antonyms: thin, lean, slender, slim; skinny, scrawny.
  • suharto — 1921–2008, Indonesian army officer and political leader: president 1967–98.
  • support — to bear or hold up (a load, mass, structure, part, etc.); serve as a foundation for.
  • surcoat — a garment worn over medieval armor, often embroidered with heraldic arms.
  • surtout — a man's close-fitting overcoat, especially a frock coat.
  • t-group — sensitivity group.
  • tambour — Music. a drum.
  • tartufo — a mousse-like Italian chocolate dessert
  • theroux — Paul (Edward). born 1941, US novelist and travel writer. His novels include Picture Palace (1978), The Mosquito Coast (1981), and My Other Life (1996); travel writings include The Great Railway Bazaar (1975)
  • thoreauHenry David, 1817–62, U.S. naturalist and author.
  • thorium — a grayish-white, lustrous, somewhat ductile and malleable, radioactive metallic element present in monazite: used as a source of nuclear energy, as a coating on sun-lamp and vacuum-tube filament coatings, and in alloys. Symbol: Th; atomic weight: 232.038; atomic number: 90; specific gravity: 11.7.
  • through — in at one end, side, or surface and out at the other: to pass through a tunnel; We drove through Denver without stopping. Sun came through the window.
  • thurlowEdward, 1st Baron, 1731–1806, British statesman: Lord Chancellor 1778–92.
  • to burn — in excess
  • tonsure — the act of cutting the hair or shaving the head.
  • torquay — formerly a borough in SW England: incorporated 1968 with Torbay.
  • torqued — Mechanics. something that produces or tends to produce torsion or rotation; the moment of a force or system of forces tending to cause rotation.
  • torquer — something that produces a torque or rotation
  • torques — Mechanics. something that produces or tends to produce torsion or rotation; the moment of a force or system of forces tending to cause rotation.
  • tortuga — an island off the N coast of and belonging to Haiti: formerly a pirate stronghold. 23 miles (37 km) long; 70 sq. mi. (180 sq. km).
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