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7-letter words containing tor

  • factors — one of the elements contributing to a particular result or situation: Poverty is only one of the factors in crime.
  • factory — a building or group of buildings with facilities for the manufacture of goods.
  • fixator — a device incorporating a metal bar and pins that is used in stabilizing difficult bone fractures.
  • functor — that which functions.
  • genitor — a parent, especially a father.
  • grantor — a person or organization that makes a grant.
  • gyrator — to move in a circle or spiral, or around a fixed point; whirl.
  • hectors — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of hector.
  • heritor — inheritor.
  • history — the branch of knowledge dealing with past events.
  • ideator — One who ideates; one who holds or generates an idea, or synthesizes a concept.
  • ignitor — Alternative spelling of igniter.
  • instore — an establishment where merchandise is sold, usually on a retail basis.
  • intorts — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of intort.
  • invitor — Informal. an invitation.
  • janitor — a person employed in an apartment house, office building, school, etc., to clean the public areas, remove garbage, and do minor repairs; caretaker.
  • katorga — the system of labour camps in Imperial Russia and the Soviet Union, a precursor to the Gulag system
  • laxator — (anatomy) A muscle whose contraction loosens some part.
  • lectors — Plural form of lector.
  • legator — a person who bequeaths; a testator.
  • levator — Anatomy. a muscle that raises a part of the body. Compare depressor.
  • lictors — Plural form of lictor.
  • locator — a person who locates something.
  • mentors — Plural form of mentor.
  • monitor — (especially formerly) a student appointed to assist in the conduct of a class or school, as to help take attendance or keep order.
  • motored — pertaining to or operated by a motor.
  • motoric — motor (def 11).
  • mutator — That which causes mutation or change.
  • mystory — (philosophy) A pedagogical genre encouraging the exploration of history as an open-minded individual rather than an analytical historian following institutional norms.
  • natator — a swimmer.
  • negator — to deny the existence, evidence, or truth of: an investigation tending to negate any supernatural influences.
  • olitory — a kitchen garden for growing herbs and vegetables
  • orators — Plural form of orator.
  • oratory — skill or eloquence in public speaking: The evangelist moved thousands to repentance with his oratory.
  • petitor — a seeker; an applicant or candidate.
  • potoroo — any of several small, ratlike kangaroos of the genus Potorous, of Australia.
  • praetor — (in the ancient Roman republic) one of a number of elected magistrates charged chiefly with the administration of civil justice and ranking next below a consul.
  • proctor — a person appointed to keep watch over students at examinations.
  • protore — a primary metalliferous material before it becomes ore
  • questor — one of two subordinates of the consuls serving as public prosecutors in certain criminal cases.
  • quittor — purulent infection of horses and other hoofed animals, characterized by chronic inflammation of the lateral cartilage of the foot and formation of fistulas that open above the coronet, usually resulting in lameness.
  • reactor — a person or thing that reacts or undergoes reaction.
  • realtor — A Realtor is a person whose job is to sell houses, buildings, and land, and who is a member of the National Association of Realtors.
  • rectory — a rector's house; parsonage.
  • relator — a person who relates or tells; narrator.
  • restore — to bring back into existence, use, or the like; reestablish: to restore order.
  • rhetors — a master or teacher of rhetoric.
  • rotator — a person or thing that rotates.
  • rotorua — a city on N central North Island, in New Zealand.
  • senator — a member of a senate.
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