7-letter words containing t, r, e, n, s
- slanter — to veer or angle away from a given level or line, especially from a horizontal; slope.
- slinter — a dodge, trick, or stratagem
- smarten — to make more trim or spruce; improve in appearance (usually followed by up): Try to smarten up your outfit.
- snifter — Also called inhaler. a pear-shaped glass, narrowing at the top to intensify the aroma of brandy, liqueur, etc.
- snorted — (of animals) to force the breath violently through the nostrils with a loud, harsh sound: The spirited horse snorted and shied at the train.
- snorter — a person or thing that snorts.
- snotter — to breathe through obstructed nostrils
- sorbent — a surface that sorbs.
- sothern — E(dward) H(ugh) 1859–1933, U.S. actor, born in England: husband of Julia Marlowe.
- stainer — a discoloration produced by foreign matter having penetrated into or chemically reacted with a material; a spot not easily removed.
- starken — to become or make rigid or stiff, as in death
- starnie — a little star
- stearin — Chemistry. any of the three glyceryl esters of stearic acid, especially C 3 H 5 (C 1 8 H 3 5 O 2) 3 , a soft, white, odorless solid found in many natural fats.
- stegner — Wallace (Earle) 1909–93, U.S. novelist and short-story writer.
- steiner — Jakob [yah-kawp] /ˈyɑ kɔp/ (Show IPA), 1796–1863, Swiss mathematician.
- stensor — L. Hornfeldt, Stockholm, mid-80's. Symbolic math, especially General Relativity. Implemented on top of SHEEP and MACSYMA.
- stenter — A stenter is a machine for drying cloth, in which sheets for drying are held by the edges.
- stentor — (in the Iliad) a Greek herald with a loud voice.
- sternal — of or relating to the sternum.
- sterner — firm, strict, or uncompromising: stern discipline.
- sternly — firm, strict, or uncompromising: stern discipline.
- sterno- — sternum, sternum and
- sternum — Anatomy, Zoology. a bone or series of bones extending along the middle line of the ventral portion of the body of most vertebrates, consisting in humans of a flat, narrow bone connected with the clavicles and the true ribs; breastbone.
- stinger — a person or thing that stings.
- stinker — a person or thing that stinks.
- stonker — to hit hard; knock unconscious.
- strange — unusual, extraordinary, or curious; odd; queer: a strange remark to make.
- strawen — of straw or strawlike
- striven — to exert oneself vigorously; try hard: He strove to make himself understood.
- stunner — a person or thing that stuns.
- styrene — a colorless, water-insoluble liquid, C 8 H 8 , having a penetrating aromatic odor, usually prepared from ethylene and benzene or ethylbenzene, that polymerizes to a clear transparent material and copolymerizes with other materials to form synthetic rubbers.
- subrent — to sublet or rent out (a property that is already rented
- surgent — surging
- suttner — Bertha von [bur-thuh von;; German ber-tuh fuh n] /ˈbɜr θə vɒn;; German ˈbɛr tə fən/ (Show IPA), 1843–1914, Austrian writer: Nobel Peace Prize 1905.
- teniers — David [dey-vid;; Flemish dah-vit;; French dah-veed] /ˈdeɪ vɪd;; Flemish ˈdɑ vɪt;; French dɑˈvid/ (Show IPA), ("the Elder") 1582–1649, Flemish painter and engraver.
- tersion — the action of rubbing off or wiping
- testern — to give (someone) a teston
- tonsure — the act of cutting the hair or shaving the head.
- torrens — Lake, a salt lake in Australia, in E South Australia. 130 miles (210 km) long; 2400 sq. mi. (6220 sq. km); 25 feet (8 meters) below sea level.
- transes — transgender or transsexual: Their son is trans. Laura is a trans woman.
- treason — the offense of acting to overthrow one's government or to harm or kill its sovereign.
- trenise — one of the figures in a quadrille
- triones — the seven principal stars of the constellation Ursa Major
- undrest — to take the clothes off (a person); disrobe.
- ventris — Michael George Francis, 1922–56, English architect and linguist.
- versant — a slope of a mountain or mountain chain.
- western — lying toward or situated in the west: our company's western office.
- winters — the cold season between autumn and spring in northern latitudes (in the Northern Hemisphere from the winter solstice to the vernal equinox; in the Southern Hemisphere from the summer solstice to the autumnal equinox).
- yestern — yester.