7-letter words containing t, o
- gumboot — a rubber boot.
- gunboat — a small, armed warship of light draft, used in ports where the water is shallow.
- gunport — an aperture, as in a protective wall or the side of a ship, through which a gun can be aimed and fired.
- gunshot — the shooting of a gun: We heard three gunshots.
- gut out — to endure (difficulties) with bravery and persistence (esp in the phrase gut it out)
- gut-rot — a type of food or alcoholic drink that is unpleasant and poor in quality
- gyrator — to move in a circle or spiral, or around a fixed point; whirl.
- hakafot — a ceremony on Simhath Torah and on other occasions in which members of a synagogue congregation carry Torah scrolls around the synagogue seven or more times.
- halicot — haricot2 .
- halimot — the court held by a lord
- hampton — Lionel, 1908–2002, U.S. jazz vibraphonist.
- handout — a portion of food or the like given to a needy person, as a beggar.
- hang to — to hold or clutch tenaciously
- hangout — a place where a person frequently visits, especially for socializing or recreation.
- haplont — the haploid individual in a life cycle that has a diploid and a haploid phase.
- hardtop — a style of car having a rigid metal top and no center posts between windows.
- haricot — a stew of lamb or mutton with turnips and potatoes.
- harlots — Plural form of harlot.
- harmost — a person serving the ancient Spartans as governor of a subject or conquered town.
- haroset — a mixture of chopped nuts and apples, wine, and spices that is eaten at the Seder meal on Passover: traditionally regarded as symbolic of the mortar used by Israelite slaves in Egypt.
- hattock — a small hat
- hautboy — oboe1 (def 1).
- have to — be obliged to
- haworth — Sir Walter Norman, 1883–1950, English chemist: Nobel Prize 1937.
- hayloft — a loft in a stable or barn for the storage of hay.
- he-goat — a male goat
- hectors — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of hector.
- helmont — Jan Baptista van [yahn bahp tis-tah-vahn] /yɑn bɑp ˈtɪs tɑ vɑn/ (Show IPA), 1579–1644, Flemish chemist and physician.
- helotry — serfdom; slavery.
- hemato- — blood
- henotic — serving to reconcile; promoting peace
- hentoff — Nat(han Irving) born 1925, U.S. writer and critic.
- hepato- — denoting the liver
- heptode — a vacuum tube containing seven electrodes, usually a plate, a cathode, a control electrode, and four grids.
- heptose — any monosaccharide containing seven carbon atoms.
- hereout — (obsolete) Out of this.
- heritor — inheritor.
- herriot — Édouard [ey-dwar] /eɪˈdwar/ (Show IPA), 1872–1957, French statesman, political leader, and author.
- hertzog — James Barry Munnik [mœn-uh k] /ˈmœn ək/ (Show IPA). South African statesman and general: prime minister 1924–39.
- hetero- — other, another, or different
- heteros — Chemistry. of or relating to an atom other than carbon, particularly in a cyclic compound.
- hideout — a safe place for hiding, especially from the law.
- hightop — Alternative form of high-top.
- hilltop — the top or summit of a hill.
- hipshot — having the hip dislocated.
- histoid — Pathology. resembling normal tissue in structure.
- histone — any of a group of five small basic proteins, occurring in the nucleus of eukaryotic cells, that organize DNA strands into nucleosomes by forming molecular complexes around which the DNA winds.
- history — the branch of knowledge dealing with past events.
- histrio — a stage actor
- hit off — to deal a blow or stroke to: Hit the nail with the hammer.