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7-letter words containing t, r, e, l

  • teleran — a navigational aid that uses radar to map the sky above an airfield, which, together with a map of the airfield itself, is transmitted by television to aircraft approaching the field.
  • telerat — (abuse, hardware)   /tel'*-rat/ Unflattering hackerism for "Teleray", a line of extremely losing terminals.
  • telergy — the form of energy supposedly transferred during telepathy
  • telford — noting a form of road pavement composed of compacted and rolled stones of various sizes.
  • telpher — Also, teleferic. a traveling unit, car, or carrier suspended from cables in a telpherage, an aerial transportation system.
  • telstar — either of two low-altitude active communications satellites launched in 1962 and 1963 by the US and used in the transmission of television programmes, telephone messages, etc
  • temblor — a tremor; earthquake.
  • templar — a member of a religious military order founded by Crusaders in Jerusalem about 1118, and suppressed in 1312.
  • tendril — a threadlike, leafless organ of climbing plants, often growing in spiral form, which attaches itself to or twines round some other body, so as to support the plant.
  • terrell — a city in NE Texas.
  • tersely — neatly or effectively concise; brief and pithy, as language.
  • tertial — pertaining to any of a set of flight feathers situated on the basal segment of a bird's wing.
  • theilerMax, 1899–1972, South African medical scientist, in the U.S. after 1922: Nobel Prize in medicine 1951.
  • thermal — Also, thermic. of, relating to, or caused by heat or temperature: thermal capacity.
  • thermel — thermocouple.
  • thiller — a thill-horse; a horse that goes between and supports the thills of a cart
  • thirled — to pierce.
  • tickler — a person or thing that tickles.
  • tiddler — small child
  • tiercel — tercel.
  • tigerly — of or like a tiger
  • timbrel — a tambourine or similar instrument.
  • tippler — a person who works at a tipple, especially at a mine.
  • toddler — a person who toddles, especially a young child learning to walk.
  • tootler — to toot gently or repeatedly on a flute or the like.
  • torelli — Giuseppe [joo-zep-pe] /dʒuˈzɛp pɛ/ (Show IPA), 1650?–1708, Italian composer and violinist.
  • tortile — twisted; coiled.
  • trachle — an exhausting effort, especially walking or working.
  • tragule — a very small, hornless deer found in Asia and West Africa
  • trailed — to drag or let drag along the ground or other surface; draw or drag along behind.
  • trailer — a large van or wagon drawn by an automobile, truck, or tractor, used especially in hauling freight by road. Compare full trailer, semitrailer.
  • trammel — Usually, trammels. a hindrance or impediment to free action; restraint: the trammels of custom.
  • trample — to tread or step heavily and noisily; stamp.
  • trangle — a small fesse or horizontal band or stripe across a shield
  • traubelHelen, 1903–72, U.S. soprano.
  • trawler — a person who trawls.
  • treacle — contrived or unrestrained sentimentality: a movie plot of the most shameless treacle.
  • treacly — contrived or unrestrained sentimentality: a movie plot of the most shameless treacle.
  • treadle — a lever or the like worked by continual action of the foot to impart motion to a machine.
  • trebled — threefold; triple.
  • trefoil — any of numerous plants belonging to the genus Trifolium, of the legume family, having usually digitate leaves of three leaflets and reddish, purple, yellow, or white flower heads, comprising the common clovers.
  • trehala — an edible, sugary substance secreted by certain Asiatic beetles of the genus Larinus, forming their pupal covering.
  • trellis — a frame or structure of latticework; lattice.
  • tremble — to shake involuntarily with quick, short movements, as from fear, excitement, weakness, or cold; quake; quiver.
  • trembly — quivering; tremulous; shaking.
  • tremolo — a tremulous or vibrating effect produced on certain instruments and in the human voice, as to express emotion.
  • trenail — a wooden pin that swells when moist, used for fastening together timbers, as those of ships.
  • trental — a series of 30 Requiems celebrated one each day for 30 consecutive days.
  • trestle — a frame typically composed of a horizontal bar or beam rigidly joined or fitted at each end to the top of a transverse A-frame, used as a barrier, a transverse support for planking, etc.; horse.
  • triable — liable to be tried judicially
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