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7-letter words containing y, e, t

  • rettery — a place where materials such as flax are retted
  • reymont — Władysław Stanisław [vwah-dee-swahf stah-nee-swahf] /vwɑˈdi swɑf stɑˈni swɑf/ (Show IPA), ("Ladislas Regmont") 1868–1925, Polish novelist: Nobel prize 1924.
  • rickety — likely to fall or collapse; shaky: a rickety chair.
  • royalet — a minor king
  • royster — roister.
  • satiety — the state of being satiated; surfeit.
  • scytale — a tool used to transmit secret messages by way of wrapping a strip of leather around a cylinder and writing on it. The leather is then unwound and must be wrapped around a cylinder of the same size to read the message. Used by the Ancient Greeks, particularly the Spartans
  • scyther — a scythe user
  • sectary — a member of a particular sect, especially an adherent of a religious body regarded as heretical or schismatic.
  • seventy — a cardinal number, 10 times 7.
  • sex toy — device or aid for sexual stimulation
  • shantey — chantey.
  • sheathy — resembling or constituting a sheath
  • shuteye — sleep.
  • shyster — a lawyer who uses unprofessional or questionable methods.
  • sintery — containing sinter
  • sketchy — like a sketch; giving only outlines or essentials. Synonyms: cursory, rough, meager, crude.
  • smytrie — a collection or group, esp of small children, animals, etc
  • society — an organized group of persons associated together for religious, benevolent, cultural, scientific, political, patriotic, or other purposes.
  • softkey — any key on a keyboard, as a function key, that can be programmed.
  • southeyRobert, 1774–1843, English poet and prose writer: poet laureate 1813–43.
  • stagery — theatrical effects or techniques, or the arrangement of a production on stage
  • stanley — Arthur Penrhyn [pen-rin] /ˈpɛn rɪn/ (Show IPA), (Dean Stanley) 1815–81, English clergyman and author.
  • starkey — a push button on a telephone or other electronic device that is marked with an asterisk, often in the lower left-hand area.
  • stately — majestic; imposing in magnificence, elegance, etc.: a stately home.
  • steeply — having an almost vertical slope or pitch, or a relatively high gradient, as a hill, an ascent, stairs, etc.
  • stenoky — the ability of an organism to live or survive only within a limited range of environments
  • stepney — a former borough of Greater London, England, now part of Tower Hamlets.
  • sternly — firm, strict, or uncompromising: stern discipline.
  • strayve — to wander aimlessly
  • streaky — occurring in streaks or a streak.
  • streamy — abounding in streams or watercourses: streamy meadows.
  • streety — of or relating to streets
  • stressy — displaying or characterized by stress
  • stroyed — to destroy.
  • stupefy — to put into a state of little or no sensibility; benumb the faculties of; put into a stupor.
  • stylate — having a style.
  • stylise — to design in or cause to conform to a particular style, as of representation or treatment in art; conventionalize.
  • stylite — one of a class of solitary ascetics who lived on the top of high pillars or columns.
  • stylize — to design in or cause to conform to a particular style, as of representation or treatment in art; conventionalize.
  • stymied — Golf. (on a putting green) an instance of a ball's lying on a direct line between the cup and the ball of an opponent about to putt.
  • stymies — Golf. (on a putting green) an instance of a ball's lying on a direct line between the cup and the ball of an opponent about to putt.
  • 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.
  • subtype — a subordinate type.
  • surtsey — an island S of and belonging to Iceland: formed by an undersea volcano 1963. About one mile (1.5 km) in diameter; about 500 feet (150 meters) high.
  • sutlery — the work of a sutler
  • sweetly — having the taste or flavor characteristic of sugar, honey, etc.
  • sweltry — hot, sizzling, roasting; sweltering.
  • syenite — a granular igneous rock consisting chiefly of orthoclase and oligoclase with hornblende, biotite, or augite.
  • sylvite — a common mineral, potassium chloride, KCl, colorless to milky-white or red, occurring in crystals, usually cubes, and masses with cubic cleavage, bitter in taste: the most important source of potassium.
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