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7-letter words that end in t

  • beat it — to go away
  • beckett — Dame Margaret Mary. born 1943, British Labour politician; leader of the House of Commons (1998–2001); secretary of state for environment, food, and rural affairs (2001–2006); foreign secretary (2006– 07)
  • becrust — to cover with crust
  • bed-sit — bed-sitter.
  • bedfast — bedridden
  • bedight — to array or adorn
  • bedpost — A bedpost is one of the four vertical supports at the corners of a bed with an old-fashioned wooden or iron frame.
  • bedrest — (medicine) confinement to bed in order to recover from an illness.
  • beermat — A beermat is a cardboard mat for resting your glass of beer on in a bar or pub.
  • behight — a vow or promise
  • beignet — a square deep-fried pastry served hot and sprinkled with icing sugar
  • belfast — the capital of Northern Ireland, a port on Belfast Lough in Belfast district, Co Antrim and Co Down: became the centre of Irish Protestantism and of the linen industry in the 17th century; seat of the Northern Ireland assembly and executive. Pop: 281 000 (2011 est)
  • belfort — a fortress town in E France: strategically situated in the Belfort Gap between the Vosges and the Jura mountains. Pop: 50 417 (1999)
  • belmont — Alva Ertskin Smith Vanderbilt [urt-skin] /ˈɜrt skɪn/ (Show IPA), 1853–1933, U.S. women's-rights activist and socialite.
  • bendlet — a narrow diagonal stripe on a heraldic shield
  • benefit — The benefit of something is the help that you get from it or the advantage that results from it.
  • benempt — past participles of bename.
  • benight — to shroud in physical, moral, or intellectual darkness
  • bennett — Alan. born 1934, British actor and playwright. His plays include Forty Years On (1968), The Old Country (1977), The Madness of George III (1991), The History Boys (2004), and the monologues for television Talking Heads (1987, 1998)
  • bepaint — to dye; paint over
  • bequest — A bequest is money or property which you legally leave to someone when you die.
  • bergylt — a large northern marine food fish
  • besaint — to give the status of a saint to
  • beshout — to shout at or about
  • besport — to amuse (oneself)
  • bespout — to utter (something) pretentiously
  • bestest — indisputably best
  • betwixtbetwixt and between, neither the one nor the other; in a middle or unresolved position: Not wanting to side with either her father or her mother, she was betwixt and between.
  • bevomit — to vomit over
  • bezzant — bezant (def 1).
  • bibelot — an attractive or curious trinket
  • biblist — biblicist
  • bidault — Georges (ʒɔːrʒ). 1899–1983, French statesman; prime minister (1946, 1949–50). His opposition to Algerian independence led him to support the OAS: he was charged with treason (1963) and fled abroad
  • bifrost — the rainbow bridge of the gods from their realm Asgard to earth
  • big cat — Big cats are lions, tigers, and other large wild animals in the cat family.
  • bigfoot — a yeti
  • biggest — large, as in size, height, width, or amount: a big house; a big quantity.
  • biofact — an item of biological information
  • biscuit — A biscuit is a small flat cake that is crisp and usually sweet.
  • bistort — a Eurasian polygonaceous plant, Polygonum bistorta, having leaf stipules fused to form a tube around the stem and a spike of small pink flowers
  • bit rot — (jargon)   A hypothetical disease the existence of which has been deduced from the observation that unused programs or features will often stop working after sufficient time has passed, even if "nothing has changed". The theory explains that bits decay as if they were radioactive. As time passes, the contents of a file or the code in a program will become increasingly garbled. People with a physics background tend to prefer the variant "bit decay" for the analogy with particle decay. There actually are physical processes that produce such effects (alpha particles generated by trace radionuclides in ceramic chip packages, for example, can change the contents of a computer memory unpredictably, and various kinds of subtle media failures can corrupt files in mass storage), but they are quite rare (and computers are built with error detection circuitry to compensate for them). The notion long favoured among hackers that cosmic rays are among the causes of such events turns out to be a myth. Bit rot is the notional cause of software rot. See also computron, quantum bogodynamics.
  • blanket — A blanket is a large square or rectangular piece of thick cloth, especially one which you put on a bed to keep you warm.
  • blatant — You use blatant to describe something bad that is done in an open or very obvious way.
  • blawort — the plant Campanula rotundifolia
  • bleaunt — a short tunic or blouse, worn in the Middle Ages.
  • bleriot — Louis (lwi). 1872–1936, French aviator and aeronautical engineer: made the first flight across the English Channel (1909)
  • blokart — a single-seat three-wheeled vehicle with a sail, built to be propelled over land by the wind
  • blow it — fail
  • blowout — A blowout is a large meal, often a celebration with family or friends, at which people may eat too much.
  • bluetit — a common European tit, Parus caeruleus, having a blue crown, wings, and tail, yellow underparts, and a black and grey head
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