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7-letter words containing t, r

  • eeriest — Superlative form of eerie.
  • efforts — exertion of physical or mental power: It will take great effort to achieve victory.
  • effront — (obsolete) To give assurance to.
  • ejector — A device that causes something to be removed or to drop out.
  • elector — A person who has the right to vote in an election.
  • electra — the daughter of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra. She persuaded her brother Orestes to avenge their father by killing his murderess Clytemnestra and her lover Aegisthus
  • electre — (obsolete) electrum, amber (alloy of gold and silver).
  • electro — A style of dance music with a fast beat and synthesized backing track.
  • elytral — relating to a beetle's elytra
  • elytron — Each of the two wing cases of a beetle.
  • elytrum — Alt form elytron.
  • embrute — Alternative form of imbrute.
  • emerita — (of a woman who is the former holder of an office, especially a female college professor) having retired but allowed to retain her title as an honor.
  • emeriti — Irregular plural form of emeritus.
  • emirate — The rank, lands, or reign of an emir.
  • emitter — A machine, device, etc., that emits something.
  • emptier — Comparative form of empty.
  • enactor — One who enacts.
  • encraty — the control of one's desires and actions
  • encrust — Cover (something) with a hard surface layer.
  • encrypt — Convert (information or data) into a cipher or code, especially to prevent unauthorized access.
  • engraft — To insert, as a scion of one tree or plant into another, for the purpose of propagation; graft onto a plant.
  • enprint — (photography) A moderately enlarged print made from a relatively small (e.g. 35 mm) negative.
  • enright — D(ennis) J(oseph). 1920–2002, British poet, essayist, and editor
  • enroute — Misspelling of en route.
  • enteral — Involving or passing through the intestine, either naturally via the mouth and oesophagus, or through an artificial opening.
  • entered — Simple past tense and past participle of enter.
  • enterer — One who makes an entrance or beginning.
  • enteric — Of, relating to, or occurring in the intestines.
  • entero- — indicating an intestine
  • enteron — The gut, the whole intestine (alimentary) canal.
  • enthral — (transitive) To hold spellbound; to bewitch, charm or captivate.
  • enticer — One who entices or allures.
  • entires — Plural form of entire.
  • entirex — (operating system)   The German company Software AG's implementation of DCOM under Unix and on IBM mainframes, released at the end of 1997. EntireX enables users to exchange their DCOM components between Windows 95, Windows NT, Unix and OS/390 and to build application programs with components running on any of those platforms.
  • entrada — (historical) An armed incursion of Spanish conquistadors into American territories.
  • entrail — (archaic) To interweave or bind.
  • entrain — Board a train.
  • entrant — A person or group that enters, joins, or takes part in something.
  • entraps — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of entrap.
  • entreat — Ask someone earnestly or anxiously to do something.
  • entrees — Plural form of entree.
  • entries — Plural form of entry.
  • entring — Present participle of entre.
  • entrold — surrounded
  • entropy — A thermodynamic quantity representing the unavailability of a system's thermal energy for conversion into mechanical work, often interpreted as the degree of disorder or randomness in the system.
  • entrust — Assign the responsibility for doing something to (someone).
  • epurate — to purify
  • equator — An imaginary line drawn around the earth equally distant from both poles, dividing the earth into northern and southern hemispheres and constituting the parallel of latitude 0 °.
  • erastus — Thomas(born Thomas Liebler or Lieber) 1524-83; Ger. theologian & physician
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