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7-letter words that end in t

  • au lait — prepared or served with milk
  • audient — a person who hears or listens
  • augment — To augment something means to make it larger, stronger, or more effective by adding something to it.
  • auscult — To auscultate.
  • auslaut — final position in a word, especially as a conditioning environment in sound change.
  • autoist — motorist.
  • automat — a machine that automatically dispenses goods, such as cigarettes, when money is inserted
  • autoput — a motorway in the former Yugoslavia
  • awlwort — a small stemless aquatic plant, Subularia aquatica, of the N hemisphere, having slender sharp-pointed leaves and minute, often submerged, white flowers: family Brassicaceae (crucifers)
  • awright — (slang, informal) Okay; indication of approval. Variant colloquial form of \"all right\". Sometimes \"awight\" or \"ah'ight\".
  • babbitt — a narrow-minded and complacent member of the middle class
  • babinet — Jacques (ʒɑk) 1794–1872, French physicist, noted for his work on the diffraction of light
  • baby at — (hardware)   The redesigned AT motherboard that had the same size as the XT motherboard had (8.5" x 11") and could thus fit into an XT case. The original 12" x 13" AT motherboards are now largely forgotten. Compare ATX.
  • babysat — to take charge of a child while the parents are temporarily away.
  • babysit — If you babysit for someone or babysit their children, you look after their children while they are out.
  • backbit — Simple past tense and past participle of backbite.
  • backfit — to retrofit, overhaul, esp an industrial plant
  • backlit — illuminated from behind
  • backlot — an area outside a film or television studio used for outdoor filming
  • backout — an instance of withdrawing (from an agreement, etc)
  • backset — a setback; a reversal
  • baddest — not good in any manner or degree.
  • bagehot — Walter. 1826–77, English economist and journalist: editor of The Economist; author of The English Constitution (1867), Physics and Politics (1872), and Lombard Street (1873)
  • bailout — A bailout of an organization or individual that has financial problems is the act of helping them by giving them money.
  • bakhmut — former name of Artemovsk.
  • baldest — Superlative form of bald.
  • ballant — a ballad
  • ballast — Ballast is any substance that is used in ships or hot-air balloons to make them heavier and more stable. Ballast usually consists of water, sand, or iron.
  • ballett — an early 17th-century dancelike vocal composition similar to the madrigal in style.
  • bamelot — the Whitehouse during Barack Obama’s presidency
  • bandlet — annulet (def 1).
  • banquet — A banquet is a grand formal dinner.
  • baptist — A Baptist is a Christian who believes that people should not be baptized until they are old enough to understand the meaning of baptism.
  • bar pit — a roadside borrow pit dug for drainage purposes.
  • barefit — barefooted
  • barmpot — a foolish or deranged person
  • barnett — a male given name.
  • barnlot — barnyard.
  • baronet — A baronet is a man who has been made a knight. When a baronet dies, the title is passed on to his son.
  • barrettElizabeth, Browning, Elizabeth Barrett.
  • basinet — a close-fitting medieval helmet of light steel usually with a visor
  • bassist — A bassist is someone who plays the bass guitar or the double bass.
  • bat out — to create or compose quickly or hastily
  • bathmat — A bathmat is a mat which you stand on while you dry yourself after getting out of the bath.
  • batshit — Completely mad or crazy.
  • bayonet — A bayonet is a long, sharp blade that can be fixed to the end of a rifle and used as a weapon.
  • be cast — (of a sheep) to have fallen and been unable to rise
  • beamlet — a small beam of light
  • bearcat — Informal. a person or thing that fights or acts with force or fierceness.
  • bearest — (archaic) Second-person singular present simple form of 'bear'.
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