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8-letter words containing t, r

  • autarkic — the condition of self-sufficiency, especially economic, as applied to a nation.
  • authored — a person who writes a novel, poem, essay, etc.; the composer of a literary work, as distinguished from a compiler, translator, editor, or copyist.
  • autocarp — any fruit that is produced through self-fertilization
  • autocrat — An autocrat is a person in authority who has complete power.
  • autofire — (video games) A feature on a joystick that permits automatic firing, as though the player were repeatedly pressing the fire button.
  • autogiro — a self-propelled aircraft supported in flight mainly by unpowered rotating horizontal blades
  • autograf — (tool)   A system for describing bar charts.
  • autogyro — autogiro
  • autoharp — a zither-like musical instrument used in country-and-western music, equipped with button-controlled dampers that can prevent selected strings from sounding, thus allowing chords to be played. It is plucked with the fingers or a plectrum
  • autozero — Autozeroing.
  • aventure — (obsolete) Accident; chance; adventure.
  • averment — the act of averring.
  • aversity — The state or condition of being averse.
  • averstar — (company)   The US software engineering company that developed Hal, under their former name, "Intermetrics". Other products include CS-4, Red, Mwave Developers Toolkit (multimedia for IBM PC), cross-compilers for C and C++; Ada '83, Ada 95, and SAMeDL. AverStar also supply client/server systems; custom software applications and turnkey systems; independent verification and validation; CAE integration technology; languages and compilers: Ada, C, C++, HDLs (MHDL), Modula, SPL/1. Address: Intermetrics, Inc., 733 Concord Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA. Telephone: +1 (617) 661 1840. Fax: +1 (617) 868 2843. Address: 7918 Jones Branch Drive, McLean, Va 22102, USA. Telephone: +1 (703) 827-2606. Fax: +1 (703) 827-5560. Also Houston, TX, Huntington Beach, CA, Warminster, PA, and others.
  • averting — Present participle of avert.
  • aviarist — a person who keeps an aviary
  • aviators — Plural form of aviator.
  • aviatrix — a female aviator
  • avigator — aerial navigation.
  • aweather — towards the weather
  • axletree — a bar fixed across the underpart of a wagon or carriage that has rounded ends on which the wheels revolve
  • azoturia — the condition of having excess nitrogen in the urine
  • babbitry — the attitude and behavior of a Babbitt.
  • babracot — a wooden grating used by Indians in South America for roasting and drying food.
  • baccarat — a card game in which two or more punters gamble against the banker
  • backport — (software)   To make a feature from a later version of a piece of software available in an earlier version. Backporting of features enables users of the older version to benefit from a feature without upgrading fully.
  • backrest — The backrest of a seat or chair is the part which you rest your back on.
  • bacteria — Bacteria are very small organisms. Some bacteria can cause disease.
  • bacterin — a vaccine prepared from bacteria
  • bactrian — of or relating to Bactria
  • bad trip — a mentally or physically horrifying drug-taking experience, as one accompanied by nightmarish hallucinations or by physical pain.
  • bad trot — a period of ill fortune
  • balestra — a jump toward the opponent followed immediately by a lunge.
  • ballarat — a town in SE Australia, in S central Victoria: originally the centre of a gold-mining region. Pop: 72 999 (2001)
  • balloter — a person who votes by ballot
  • baluster — any of a set of posts supporting a rail or coping
  • bancroft — George1800-91; U.S. historian & statesman
  • banditry — Banditry is used to refer to acts of robbery and violence in areas where the rule of law has broken down.
  • bandster — a person who goes behind a reaper and binds sheaves of wheat
  • bangster — a ruffian; thug
  • banister — A banister is a rail supported by posts and fixed along the side of a staircase. The plural banisters can be used to refer to one of these rails.
  • bankrupt — People or organizations that go bankrupt do not have enough money to pay their debts.
  • bankster — a banker or investor whose financial practices have been exposed as illegal
  • banneret — a knight who was entitled to command other knights and men-at-arms under his own banner
  • bantered — Simple past tense and past participle of banter.
  • banterer — One who banters.
  • baptizer — someone who baptises
  • bar cart — a small table on wheels, outfitted for serving drinks; a portable bar.
  • bar foot — a foot having the form of a bar connecting the corresponding front and rear legs of a piece.
  • bar-tack — a close series of stitches crossing a piece of cloth, as in an article of clothing, in order to reinforce it at a point of concentrated strain.
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